 BEGIN:VCALENDAR
VERSION:2.0
PRODID:-//Awareness Days - ECPv6.16.2//NONSGML v1.0//EN
CALSCALE:GREGORIAN
METHOD:PUBLISH
X-ORIGINAL-URL:https://www.awarenessdays.com
X-WR-CALDESC:Events for Awareness Days
REFRESH-INTERVAL;VALUE=DURATION:PT1H
X-Robots-Tag:noindex
X-PUBLISHED-TTL:PT1H
BEGIN:VTIMEZONE
TZID:America/New_York
BEGIN:DAYLIGHT
TZOFFSETFROM:-0500
TZOFFSETTO:-0400
TZNAME:EDT
DTSTART:20250309T070000
END:DAYLIGHT
BEGIN:STANDARD
TZOFFSETFROM:-0400
TZOFFSETTO:-0500
TZNAME:EST
DTSTART:20251102T060000
END:STANDARD
BEGIN:DAYLIGHT
TZOFFSETFROM:-0500
TZOFFSETTO:-0400
TZNAME:EDT
DTSTART:20260308T070000
END:DAYLIGHT
BEGIN:STANDARD
TZOFFSETFROM:-0400
TZOFFSETTO:-0500
TZNAME:EST
DTSTART:20261101T060000
END:STANDARD
BEGIN:DAYLIGHT
TZOFFSETFROM:-0500
TZOFFSETTO:-0400
TZNAME:EDT
DTSTART:20270314T070000
END:DAYLIGHT
BEGIN:STANDARD
TZOFFSETFROM:-0400
TZOFFSETTO:-0500
TZNAME:EST
DTSTART:20271107T060000
END:STANDARD
END:VTIMEZONE
BEGIN:VTIMEZONE
TZID:Europe/London
BEGIN:DAYLIGHT
TZOFFSETFROM:+0000
TZOFFSETTO:+0100
TZNAME:BST
DTSTART:20250330T010000
END:DAYLIGHT
BEGIN:STANDARD
TZOFFSETFROM:+0100
TZOFFSETTO:+0000
TZNAME:GMT
DTSTART:20251026T010000
END:STANDARD
BEGIN:DAYLIGHT
TZOFFSETFROM:+0000
TZOFFSETTO:+0100
TZNAME:BST
DTSTART:20260329T010000
END:DAYLIGHT
BEGIN:STANDARD
TZOFFSETFROM:+0100
TZOFFSETTO:+0000
TZNAME:GMT
DTSTART:20261025T010000
END:STANDARD
BEGIN:DAYLIGHT
TZOFFSETFROM:+0000
TZOFFSETTO:+0100
TZNAME:BST
DTSTART:20270328T010000
END:DAYLIGHT
BEGIN:STANDARD
TZOFFSETFROM:+0100
TZOFFSETTO:+0000
TZNAME:GMT
DTSTART:20271031T010000
END:STANDARD
END:VTIMEZONE
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260621
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20260622
DTSTAMP:20260520T205834
CREATED:20260505T135200Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260505T135200Z
UID:10021619-1782000000-1782086399@www.awarenessdays.com
SUMMARY:World Music Day
DESCRIPTION:World Music Day\, also known as Fete de la Musique or Make Music Day\, takes place on Sunday 21 June 2026. The day is a global celebration of music in all its forms\, with free concerts\, street performances\, and amateur jam sessions held in more than 120 countries on the longest day of the Northern Hemisphere year. \nThe Story Behind World Music Day\nThe story of World Music Day begins in Paris in 1982. Jack Lang\, France’s newly appointed Minister of Culture\, was looking for a bold cultural project that would put music into everyday life. A national survey by his ministry had just revealed that 5 million French people\, including one in two young people\, played a musical instrument\, yet most never performed in public. Lang and his Director of Music and Dance\, Maurice Fleuret\, saw an opportunity to change that. Their guiding idea was simple: “music everywhere and concerts nowhere”. \nThe first Fete de la Musique was held in Paris on 21 June 1982\, the summer solstice. Professional and amateur musicians were invited to perform for free in streets\, squares\, parks\, and public buildings\, with no fees and no hierarchy of genre. The response was immediate and joyful\, and the event quickly became an annual fixture in the French cultural calendar. \nFrom France the idea spread rapidly. Italy adopted the festival in 1985\, and within two decades it had become one of the most widely observed musical celebrations in the world. Today the day is recognised by UNESCO and is celebrated in cities including Berlin\, New York\, London\, Sydney\, Mumbai\, Beijing\, and Rio de Janeiro. The American version\, Make Music Day\, was launched by the Make Music Alliance in New York in 2007 and now takes place in more than 100 US cities. \nWhen and Where is World Music Day Celebrated?\nWorld Music Day falls on 21 June every year\, the date of the summer solstice in the Northern Hemisphere. In 2026 it lands on a Sunday. The fixed date is part of the magic of the event: it coincides with the longest day of the year\, giving performers and audiences extra hours of daylight to play\, listen\, and gather. \nThe day is celebrated in more than 120 countries and an estimated 700 cities worldwide. France remains the spiritual home of the festival\, with more than 18\,000 concerts taking place in a single day and an audience of around 10 million people. Italy hosts more than 25\,000 performing groups\, and China stages around 15\,000 free events across 200 cities. \nTraditions and Customs\nWhile each country interprets the day in its own way\, several core traditions are shared across borders: \n\nFree performances – The founding principle is that music must be free. Professional and amateur musicians perform without fees\, and audiences attend without buying tickets.\nOpen public spaces – Streets\, squares\, parks\, train stations\, and even balconies become impromptu stages. The aim is to remove the barrier between performer and passer-by.\nAll genres welcome – From classical quartets to punk bands\, from traditional folk to electronic DJs\, no style is prioritised over another.\nAmateur participation – Anyone who plays an instrument or sings is encouraged to take part\, regardless of skill level. The day belongs to bedroom guitarists as much as conservatoire graduates.\nLate-night sessions – Because the festival falls on the summer solstice\, performances often continue late into the evening\, with cities granting special licences for noise and street use.\n\nWays to Celebrate World Music Day\nYou do not need to be in Paris to take part. There are countless ways to mark the day at home\, in your community\, or online: \n\nAttend a free concert – Search for Fete de la Musique or Make Music Day events in your nearest city. Most are free and run from late afternoon into the night.\nPerform in public – If you play an instrument\, set up in a park\, on a high street\, or outside your front door. Even an informal busking session is in the spirit of the day.\nHost a house concert – Invite friends or neighbours round for an acoustic session. Acts can take turns playing favourite songs.\nDiscover a new genre – Spend the day listening to music from a country or culture you usually overlook. Streaming services curate solstice playlists for the occasion.\nSupport a local musician – Buy an album\, a ticket\, or merchandise from an artist you love. Independent musicians rely on direct support more than ever.\nTeach or learn an instrument – Use the day as a starting point. Book a lesson\, dust off the recorder you abandoned at school\, or download a beginner app.\n\nFacts and Figures\n\nWorld Music Day was founded in 1982 by French Minister of Culture Jack Lang and Director of Music and Dance Maurice Fleuret.\nThe first event was held on 21 June 1982 in Paris\, deliberately chosen as the date of the summer solstice.\nThe festival is now celebrated in more than 120 countries and roughly 700 cities worldwide.\nFrance hosts around 18\,000 concerts on the day\, drawing an estimated audience of 10 million.\nMake Music Day\, the official American version of Fete de la Musique\, was launched in New York in 2007 and now reaches more than 100 US cities.\n\nFrequently Asked Questions\nWhat is World Music Day?\nWorld Music Day is an annual celebration of music in all its forms\, held on 21 June each year. Performances are free and open to the public\, taking place in streets\, parks\, and public buildings around the world. \nWhen is World Music Day in 2026?\nWorld Music Day 2026 falls on Sunday 21 June 2026. \nWhy is World Music Day celebrated on 21 June?\nThe date was chosen by founder Jack Lang to coincide with the summer solstice\, the longest day of the year in the Northern Hemisphere. The extra daylight makes outdoor performances easier and more atmospheric. \nSpread the Word\nShare World Music Day with your community using #WorldMusicDay\, #FeteDeLaMusique\, and #MakeMusicDay2026. Whether you mark the occasion with a busking session\, a house concert\, or simply a long playlist\, every bit of participation helps keep this global tradition alive. \nRelated Awareness Days\n\nInternational Reggae Day – A complementary day celebrating one of the world’s most influential musical genres.\nWorld Goth Day – Honours the goth subculture and its rich musical heritage.\nCinco de Mayo – A cultural celebration with strong musical traditions\, particularly mariachi.\n\nLinks\n\nVisit the official Fete de la Musique website\nExplore more awareness days at AwarenessDays.com
URL:https://www.awarenessdays.com/awareness-days-calendar/world-music-day/
LOCATION:International
CATEGORIES:Arts, Culture & Heritage,International,June Awareness Days
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.awarenessdays.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/istock-2256466857.jpg
GEO:37.09024;-95.712891
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260621
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20260622
DTSTAMP:20260520T205834
CREATED:20260505T140532Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260505T150402Z
UID:10021672-1782000000-1782086399@www.awarenessdays.com
SUMMARY:Global MND Awareness Day
DESCRIPTION:Global MND Awareness Day is held every year on 21 June\, the date of the summer or winter solstice depending on the hemisphere. The day was established by the International Alliance of ALS/MND Associations to raise awareness of motor neurone disease (MND)\, also known as amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) in some countries\, and to push for better research\, care\, and support. In 2026 it falls on Sunday 21 June. \nWhat is Global MND Awareness Day?\nGlobal MND Awareness Day is the international observance for motor neurone disease\, a group of progressive neurological conditions that attack the nerves controlling voluntary muscles. The day is led by the International Alliance of ALS/MND Associations\, a federation of around 50 patient organisations from across the world\, and is supported by national charities including the MND Association in England\, Wales\, and Northern Ireland\, MND Scotland\, the ALS Association in the United States\, and MND Australia. \nWhen is Global MND Awareness Day?\nGlobal MND Awareness Day takes place on 21 June every year. In 2026 it falls on a Sunday. The date was chosen because it is the summer solstice in the Northern Hemisphere and the winter solstice in the Southern Hemisphere\, symbolising both the longest day and the shortest day. The duality reflects the global nature of the MND community and the hope that increased awareness can bring more light to those living with the disease. The official hashtag is #GlobalMNDAwarenessDay. \nWhy Global MND Awareness Day Matters\nMotor neurone disease is a devastating condition that affects an estimated 5\,000 people in the UK at any one time and around 30\,000 people in the United States. Around one in 300 people will be diagnosed with MND in their lifetime. The illness usually causes progressive muscle weakness\, leading to difficulty walking\, speaking\, swallowing\, and eventually breathing\, with most people surviving two to five years from diagnosis. There is currently no cure and only a small number of treatments that slow progression. Global MND Awareness Day exists to raise the profile of the disease\, to fund desperately needed research\, and to push for better care and support for the people living with it. \nHow to Get Involved in Global MND Awareness Day\nAnyone can take part\, with options ranging from small acts of solidarity to major fundraising: \n\nLight up a building blue – Many landmarks around the world light up blue on 21 June; ask your local council\, employer\, or school to join in.\nTake part in the global virtual relay – The International Alliance of ALS/MND Associations runs an annual virtual relay where people share videos as the day moves around the world.\nDonate to MND research – The MND Association\, MND Scotland\, the ALS Association\, and MND Australia all fund cutting-edge research into causes and treatments.\nSign the international charter – The Alliance publishes annual policy asks for governments and health systems; signing helps amplify the message.\nRun a workplace fundraiser – Cake sales\, dress-down days\, and sponsored walks are all popular MND fundraising activities.\nShare a personal story – With permission\, sharing the experiences of people living with MND helps the public understand the urgency.\nWrite to your elected representatives – Push for faster diagnosis\, better access to specialist nurses\, and protected research funding for MND.\n\nHistory of Global MND Awareness Day\nThe International Alliance of ALS/MND Associations was founded in 1992 to bring together the world’s leading patient organisations and to coordinate research\, advocacy\, and care worldwide. Global MND Awareness Day was established by the Alliance and first marked in 1997\, building on national awareness efforts run by member charities. The choice of 21 June reflected a deliberate symbolic message: the longest and shortest days of the year coming together to represent the global MND community and the contrast between hope and grief that families living with the disease describe. \nThe day’s profile was transformed in 2014 when the ALS Ice Bucket Challenge went viral on social media\, raising more than $220 million for ALS research worldwide and significantly increasing public awareness of the disease. Since then\, Global MND Awareness Day has continued to grow\, with virtual relays\, building lighting events\, parliamentary receptions\, and community fundraisers held in dozens of countries every June. Recent years have seen significant scientific progress\, including new genetic understanding of the disease and emerging therapies for specific genetic forms of ALS. \nNoteworthy Facts About Global MND Awareness Day\n\nGlobal MND Awareness Day was first marked in 1997\, led by the International Alliance of ALS/MND Associations.\nThe 21 June date marks both the longest day in the Northern Hemisphere and the shortest day in the Southern Hemisphere.\nAround one in 300 people will be diagnosed with MND in their lifetime.\nAn estimated 5\,000 people in the UK live with MND at any one time.\nThe 2014 Ice Bucket Challenge raised more than $220 million globally for ALS research.\n\nFrequently Asked Questions\nWhat is Global MND Awareness Day?\nAn international awareness day held on 21 June each year that raises the profile of motor neurone disease and supports research\, care\, and advocacy. \nWhen is Global MND Awareness Day in 2026?\nSunday 21 June 2026. \nWho founded Global MND Awareness Day?\nThe International Alliance of ALS/MND Associations\, founded in 1992\, established the day in the late 1990s. \nSpread the Word\nHelp raise awareness by sharing Global MND Awareness Day with your friends\, family\, and followers. Use the hashtag #GlobalMNDAwarenessDay on social media. The more people who learn about MND\, the better the chance of faster diagnosis\, kinder care\, and a cure. \nRelated Awareness Days\n\nWorld Mental Health Day – Recognises the mental health impact of living with a serious neurological condition.\nWorld Blood Donor Day – Falls in the same week and supports another vital area of medical care.\nChildren’s Hospice Week – Connects with the broader theme of palliative care and family support.\n\nLinks\n\nVisit the International Alliance of ALS/MND Associations Global Day page\nExplore more awareness days at AwarenessDays.com
URL:https://www.awarenessdays.com/awareness-days-calendar/global-mnd-awareness-day/
LOCATION:International
CATEGORIES:Health & Wellbeing Awareness,International,June Awareness Days
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.awarenessdays.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/11/iStock-1947164077-1.jpg
GEO:37.09024;-95.712891
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260621
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20260622
DTSTAMP:20260520T205834
CREATED:20260505T140604Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260505T150657Z
UID:10021674-1782000000-1782086399@www.awarenessdays.com
SUMMARY:National Peaches and Cream Day
DESCRIPTION:National Peaches and Cream Day is a US food celebration that falls on 21 June every year\, the same day as the summer solstice. The day shines a light on one of the simplest\, most evocative summer desserts: ripe peaches with fresh cream. In 2026 it lands on Sunday 21 June. \nHow to Celebrate National Peaches and Cream Day\nThe day is built for relaxed home cooking\, summer entertaining\, and farm-to-table eating: \n\nMake the classic dish – Slice ripe peaches over a bowl of softly whipped cream or vanilla ice cream; add a sprinkle of sugar or a squeeze of lemon to bring out the sweetness.\nVisit a peach farm or orchard – In states like Georgia\, South Carolina\, California\, and New Jersey\, June is peak peach picking season; many orchards run pick-your-own days.\nBake a peach cobbler or crumble – Sliced peaches under a buttery topping\, served warm with cream\, is a Southern classic perfect for the day.\nTry peaches and cream ice cream – Many independent ice cream parlours release a peaches and cream flavour around 21 June; alternatively make your own with a simple no-churn recipe.\nMake peach and cream cocktails – A Bellini\, peach Bellini float\, or bourbon peach cream cocktail brings the flavour combination to a grown-up celebration.\nBake a peaches and cream cake – Layer sponge with whipped cream and fresh peach slices for a celebratory dessert.\nMake peach jam or chutney – Preserving the season’s peaches means you can enjoy the flavour into autumn and winter.\nShare your creation online – Post your dish with #PeachesAndCreamDay and tag your favourite local growers and dairy producers.\n\nWhat is National Peaches and Cream Day?\nNational Peaches and Cream Day is an unofficial US food day that celebrates the pairing of ripe peaches with fresh cream. It falls on 21 June\, often coinciding with the summer solstice. Like many US food days\, it has been embraced by farmers\, food brands\, and home cooks even though it does not have a single founding organisation. \nWhen is National Peaches and Cream Day?\nNational Peaches and Cream Day is held every year on 21 June. In 2026 it falls on Sunday 21 June. The official hashtag is #PeachesAndCreamDay. \nThe History of National Peaches and Cream Day\nThe exact origin of National Peaches and Cream Day is debated. Some sources suggest the holiday has been around since the 1920s\, while others link the first celebration to 1972\, with 21 June chosen as a way to mark the beginning of the summer season and the start of the North American peach harvest. National Day Calendar\, the most-cited US authority on national days\, lists 21 June as the date but is still researching its exact origin. \nPeaches themselves have a much longer history. Originally native to north-west China\, where they have been cultivated for more than 4\,000 years\, peaches travelled west along the Silk Road and were eventually brought to North America by Spanish explorers. Spanish monks planted peaches in Florida in the 1500s\, and by the 1600s peaches were being grown in Virginia and the Carolinas. Today\, Georgia\, South Carolina\, and California are the largest US peach-producing states. National Peaches and Cream Day sits within a wider cluster of US summer food days\, including National Eat Your Vegetables Day on 17 June and National Strawberry Shortcake Day on 14 June. \nFun Facts About National Peaches and Cream Day\n\nNational Peaches and Cream Day falls on 21 June\, often the day of the summer solstice.\nPeaches were first cultivated in north-west China more than 4\,000 years ago.\nThe United States is the world’s third-largest peach producer\, after China and Italy.\nGeorgia is nicknamed the Peach State\, although California produces more peaches by volume.\nPeach skin contains most of the fruit’s fibre and antioxidants.\nThe Romans called peaches malum persicum\, meaning Persian apple\, after the route by which they reached Europe.\n\nWhy National Peaches and Cream Day Matters\nBeyond the obvious enjoyment of a delicious dessert\, food days like this give US fruit growers and dairy producers a moment in the spotlight. Peach orchards have been hit hard in recent years by late frosts\, droughts\, and labour shortages\, and the day provides a natural cue to support local farms. Buying peaches at a farmers’ market or pick-your-own orchard helps keep regional growing alive. \nFrequently Asked Questions\nWhat is National Peaches and Cream Day?\nAn unofficial US food day held on 21 June each year that celebrates ripe peaches paired with fresh cream. \nWhen is National Peaches and Cream Day in 2026?\nSunday 21 June 2026. \nWhat’s the best way to eat peaches and cream?\nSlice perfectly ripe peaches over a bowl of softly whipped cream or vanilla ice cream and add a sprinkle of sugar or a squeeze of lemon. The dish works equally well in a peach cobbler\, on top of pancakes\, or layered into a sponge cake. \nSpread the Word\nJoin the celebration and share your best peaches and cream photos on social media with #PeachesAndCreamDay and #NationalPeachesAndCreamDay. Tag your favourite local peach growers and dairy producers and challenge your friends to try the classic dish. \nRelated Awareness Days\n\nCinco de Mayo – Another US celebration with strong food traditions.\nNational Picnic Month – Celebrates the wider summer food culture that peaches and cream sit within.\nTeacher Appreciation Week – Another US national day where small homemade treats are part of the tradition.\n\nLinks\n\nExplore more awareness days at AwarenessDays.com
URL:https://www.awarenessdays.com/awareness-days-calendar/national-peaches-and-cream-day/
LOCATION:United States\, United States
CATEGORIES:Food & Nutrition Awareness,June Awareness Days,United States
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.awarenessdays.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/03/unsplash-gUmgIYvoW5c.jpg
GEO:37.09024;-95.712891
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260621
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20260628
DTSTAMP:20260520T205834
CREATED:20260505T140032Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260505T140032Z
UID:10021654-1782000000-1782604799@www.awarenessdays.com
SUMMARY:Deafblind Awareness Week
DESCRIPTION:Deafblind Awareness Week is held during the last week of June each year\, anchored around the birthday of Helen Keller on 27 June. The week raises public understanding of the experiences of people with combined sight and hearing loss and showcases the contribution of the deafblind community. In 2026 the week runs from Sunday 21 June to Saturday 27 June. \nWhat is Deafblind Awareness Week?\nDeafblind Awareness Week is an international observance dedicated to people who live with combined sight and hearing loss\, sometimes called dual sensory loss. The week was first proclaimed by United States President Ronald Reagan in 1984 to commemorate Helen Keller\, the author\, educator\, and disability rights advocate born in Tuscumbia\, Alabama on 27 June 1880. It is now marked across the UK\, US\, Canada\, Australia\, and many other countries by deafblind charities\, schools\, and disability organisations. \nWhen is Deafblind Awareness Week?\nDeafblind Awareness Week takes place during the last week of June each year. In 2026 the week is generally observed from Sunday 21 June to Saturday 27 June\, with the precise dates varying slightly by country and organising charity. Helen Keller’s birthday on 27 June is at the centre of the observance. The official hashtag is #DeafblindAwarenessWeek. \nWhy Deafblind Awareness Week Matters\nDeafblindness is more common than many people assume. The charity Deafblind UK estimates there are around 450\,000 people in the UK living with sight and hearing loss\, and the number is expected to rise sharply as the population ages. Globally\, the World Federation of the Deafblind estimates between 0.2 and 2 per cent of the world’s population is deafblind. Many people with combined sensory loss face significant barriers to communication\, mobility\, employment\, and social inclusion. The week aims to challenge those barriers by educating the public\, training service providers\, and celebrating the leadership of deafblind people themselves. \nHow to Get Involved in Deafblind Awareness Week\nAnyone can take part\, with activities ranging from simple gestures of inclusion to fundraising and policy advocacy: \n\nLearn the deafblind manual alphabet – The deafblind manual is a tactile fingerspelling alphabet that takes only an hour to learn the basics; charities such as Deafblind UK offer free guides.\nSupport a deafblind charity – Donate to or volunteer with organisations such as Deafblind UK\, Sense\, the Helen Keller National Center\, and Deafblind International.\nRead books by deafblind authors – Helen Keller’s autobiography The Story of My Life is a starting point; recent memoirs by Haben Girma and Robert Smithdas offer contemporary perspectives.\nImprove accessibility at work – Use the week to audit your workplace’s communication accessibility\, including BSL-trained staff\, written backup for spoken instructions\, and high-contrast signage.\nRun a school assembly – Free resources from deafblind charities include age-appropriate films\, lesson plans\, and activities such as guided sensory walks.\nShare deafblind voices on social media – Amplify content created by deafblind activists and creators rather than speaking for them.\nPush for policy change – Advocate for full implementation of the UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities and for accessible transport\, healthcare\, and digital services.\n\nHistory of Deafblind Awareness Week\nHelen Keller was born on 27 June 1880 in Tuscumbia\, Alabama\, and lost both her sight and hearing at 19 months old following an illness. She learned to communicate through finger-spelling with her teacher and lifelong companion Anne Sullivan from 1887 onward\, and went on to graduate from Radcliffe College cum laude in 1904. Keller spent her life as a writer\, lecturer\, and activist for people with disabilities\, women’s suffrage\, labour rights\, and pacifism\, becoming one of the most recognisable disability rights advocates of the 20th century. \nOn 22 June 1984\, US President Ronald Reagan signed Presidential Proclamation 5214\, designating the week beginning 24 June 1984 as Helen Keller Deaf-Blind Awareness Week. The proclamation honoured Helen Keller’s birthday on 27 June and recognised the contributions of deafblind people and the organisations that support them. Other countries quickly followed\, and the week is now widely observed across the English-speaking world. UK charity Deafblind UK has marked the week each year alongside parallel observances by Sense and the Helen Keller National Center in the United States. \nNoteworthy Facts About Deafblind Awareness Week\n\nHelen Keller was born on 27 June 1880\, the date around which the week is anchored.\nPresident Ronald Reagan first proclaimed Helen Keller Deaf-Blind Awareness Week in 1984.\nAn estimated 450\,000 people in the UK live with combined sight and hearing loss (Deafblind UK).\nThe deafblind manual alphabet uses tactile fingerspelling on the palm.\nHelen Keller graduated cum laude from Radcliffe College in 1904.\n\nFrequently Asked Questions\nWhat is Deafblind Awareness Week?\nAn international observance during the last week of June that raises awareness of combined sight and hearing loss and celebrates the deafblind community. \nWhen is Deafblind Awareness Week in 2026?\nSunday 21 June to Saturday 27 June 2026. \nWhy is Deafblind Awareness Week held in late June?\nBecause it commemorates the birthday of Helen Keller\, the deafblind author and activist\, on 27 June 1880. \nSpread the Word\nHelp raise awareness by sharing Deafblind Awareness Week with your friends\, family\, and followers. Use the hashtag #DeafblindAwarenessWeek on social media. The more people who learn about deafblindness\, the more inclusive our communities become. \nRelated Awareness Days\n\nWorld Mental Health Day – Recognises the mental health impact of isolation that deafblind people can experience.\nWorld Elder Abuse Awareness Day – Many older adults develop combined sensory loss\, putting them at higher risk of social isolation.\nWorld Hand Hygiene Day – Highlights the role of touch-based communication and care\, central to deafblind support.\n\nLinks\n\nVisit Helen Keller Services\nExplore more awareness days at AwarenessDays.com
URL:https://www.awarenessdays.com/awareness-days-calendar/deafblind-awareness-week/
LOCATION:International
CATEGORIES:Health & Wellbeing Awareness,International,June Awareness Days
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.awarenessdays.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/istock-1417921806.jpg
GEO:37.09024;-95.712891
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260622
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20260629
DTSTAMP:20260520T205834
CREATED:20260505T140008Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260505T140008Z
UID:10021653-1782086400-1782691199@www.awarenessdays.com
SUMMARY:Children's Hospice Week
DESCRIPTION:Children’s Hospice Week is the UK’s annual awareness week for children’s hospices and palliative care services. Run by national charity Together for Short Lives\, the week celebrates the work of children’s hospices and raises vital funds for the families they support. In 2026 it takes place from Monday 22 June to Sunday 28 June. \nWhat is Children’s Hospice Week?\nChildren’s Hospice Week is a UK-wide awareness and fundraising week dedicated to children’s hospices and the seriously ill children and young people they care for. It is coordinated each year by Together for Short Lives\, the leading UK charity for children with life-limiting and life-threatening conditions. The week unites the children’s palliative care sector to increase public understanding\, recognise the work of frontline staff\, and raise funds that keep vital services running. \nWhen is Children’s Hospice Week?\nChildren’s Hospice Week takes place each June. In 2026 the week runs from Monday 22 June to Sunday 28 June. Together for Short Lives publishes a campaign toolkit with social media graphics\, fundraising packs\, and template assemblies for schools. The official hashtag is #ChildrensHospiceWeek. \nWhy Children’s Hospice Week Matters\nAn estimated 99\,000 children and young people in the UK are living with a life-limiting or life-threatening condition\, and the number is rising as medical advances enable more children to survive previously fatal diagnoses. Children’s hospices provide specialist palliative care including symptom management\, respite stays\, sibling support\, end-of-life care\, and bereavement services\, all free to families. Yet most receive only around 20 per cent of their funding from the state\, leaving services to raise tens of millions of pounds a year through fundraising. Children’s Hospice Week is the sector’s most important moment to make the case for sustainable government funding and to thank the donors who keep services open. \nHow to Get Involved in Children’s Hospice Week\nAnyone can take part\, whether you are a parent\, school\, employer\, or local community group: \n\nTake on the 99\,000 Steps Challenge – Together for Short Lives runs an annual fundraising walk inspired by the 99\,000 children with life-limiting conditions in the UK.\nDonate to your local children’s hospice – There are around 54 children’s hospice services in the UK\, including Helen House\, Martin House\, Acorns\, and Demelza; donations to your local service support the families on your doorstep.\nRun a workplace fundraiser – Bake sales\, dress-down days\, and sponsored events are all featured in Together for Short Lives’ free fundraising pack.\nHold a school assembly – The campaign toolkit includes age-appropriate materials that explain children’s palliative care simply and respectfully.\nVolunteer at a hospice shop – Local hospice charity shops always welcome volunteers and the income raised supports clinical services.\nShare a family story – With permission\, sharing posts from hospice families on social media helps the public understand what services do.\nLobby your MP – Together for Short Lives runs an active campaign for sustainable funding and a fairer respite care offer; the week is a natural moment to write to your MP.\n\nHistory of Children’s Hospice Week\nChildren’s hospice care in the UK began with the opening of Helen House in Oxford in 1982\, the world’s first dedicated children’s hospice\, founded by Sister Frances Dominica Ritchie. The model grew rapidly\, and by the early 2000s a national network of children’s hospices was offering specialist palliative care across the UK. Together for Short Lives was formed in 2011 from the merger of two national charities\, the Association of Children’s Hospices and Children’s Hospices UK\, creating a single voice for children’s palliative care. \nChildren’s Hospice Week was launched as a sector-wide awareness moment\, giving the UK’s children’s hospices a coordinated platform to celebrate their work\, secure media coverage\, and thank supporters. The week now involves every children’s hospice service in the UK\, alongside major partners such as Morrisons\, who have raised tens of millions of pounds for Together for Short Lives through till-point campaigns and customer donations. \nNoteworthy Facts About Children’s Hospice Week\n\nAround 99\,000 children and young people in the UK have a life-limiting or life-threatening condition.\nThe world’s first children’s hospice\, Helen House\, opened in Oxford in 1982.\nThere are around 54 children’s hospice services across the UK.\nMost children’s hospices raise around 80 per cent of their income through donations.\nTogether for Short Lives was formed in 2011 from the merger of two predecessor charities.\n\nFrequently Asked Questions\nWhat is Children’s Hospice Week?\nThe UK’s annual awareness and fundraising week for children’s hospices and the families they support\, coordinated by Together for Short Lives. \nWhen is Children’s Hospice Week in 2026?\nMonday 22 June to Sunday 28 June 2026. \nWho organises Children’s Hospice Week?\nTogether for Short Lives\, the UK’s national charity for children with life-limiting conditions. \nSpread the Word\nHelp raise awareness by sharing Children’s Hospice Week with your friends\, family\, and followers. Use the hashtag #ChildrensHospiceWeek on social media. Every share helps families with seriously ill children feel less alone. \nRelated Awareness Days\n\nWorld Mental Health Day – Recognises the bereavement and emotional support needs of families using hospice services.\nInternational Day of the Midwife – Honours another vital workforce supporting families through difficult times.\nMaternal Mental Health Awareness Week – Connects with the mental wellbeing of parents whose children use hospice care.\n\nLinks\n\nVisit the official Children’s Hospice Week page at Together for Short Lives\nExplore more awareness days at AwarenessDays.com
URL:https://www.awarenessdays.com/awareness-days-calendar/childrens-hospice-week/
LOCATION:United Kingdom\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:Health & Wellbeing Awareness,June Awareness Days,United Kingdom
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.awarenessdays.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/istock-2251181631.jpg
GEO:55.378051;-3.435973
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260622
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20260629
DTSTAMP:20260520T205834
CREATED:20260505T140348Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260505T140348Z
UID:10021667-1782086400-1782691199@www.awarenessdays.com
SUMMARY:World Female Ranger Week
DESCRIPTION:World Female Ranger Week takes place from Monday 22 June to Sunday 28 June 2026\, although the official campaign also recognises the 23–30 June dates used in some countries. Founded by adventurer Holly Budge through her charity How Many Elephants\, the week amplifies the voices and stories of women working on the front line of wildlife conservation. From elephant rangers in Kenya to anti-poaching units in South Africa\, the week celebrates a workforce that has long been overlooked. \nWhat is World Female Ranger Week?\nWorld Female Ranger Week is an international awareness week dedicated to female wildlife rangers. It celebrates their contribution to conservation\, draws attention to the unique challenges they face\, and pushes for better pay\, equipment\, training\, and support. The week was created by How Many Elephants\, a UK-registered charity that fights elephant poaching and the ivory trade through education and direct support to ranger units. \nWhen is World Female Ranger Week?\nWorld Female Ranger Week 2026 runs from Monday 22 June to Sunday 28 June 2026. The dates fall in late June each year\, sometimes spanning 23–30 June\, and are timed to draw maximum attention to ranger work during the northern hemisphere summer. \nWhy World Female Ranger Week Matters\nWomen make up only an estimated 11% of the global ranger workforce\, despite evidence that female rangers often bring valuable skills in community engagement\, intelligence gathering\, and de-escalation. Female rangers face additional challenges including discrimination\, lack of suitable equipment\, and limited maternity provision. The week shines a light on this disparity\, raises funds for female ranger units\, and pushes governments and NGOs to invest in gender equity. It also celebrates extraordinary individuals: from the Black Mambas in South Africa to the Akashinga in Zimbabwe\, female rangers are reshaping the future of conservation. \nHow to Get Involved in World Female Ranger Week\nYou do not need to be in Africa or Asia to make a difference: \n\nDonate to How Many Elephants – Funds go directly to front-line female ranger units\, providing equipment\, training\, and support that governments often do not.\nSponsor a ranger – Many partner organisations\, including The Orangutan Project\, IAPF\, and Black Mambas APU\, offer ranger sponsorship schemes.\nAttend a panel or webinar – The official World Female Ranger Week programme includes free online events featuring rangers\, scientists\, and conservationists.\nSpread the word on social media – Use #WorldFemaleRangerWeek and #WFRW2026 to amplify ranger stories and the campaign’s reach.\nBuy from conservation-supporting brands – Many ethical fashion and outdoor brands collaborate with the campaign to fund ranger work.\nHost a fundraiser – Schools\, workplaces\, and community groups can run quizzes\, sponsored walks\, or wildlife-themed events to support female rangers.\nEngage politicians and policymakers – Write to your MP about UK Aid for conservation\, which often funds ranger programmes overseas.\n\nHistory of World Female Ranger Week\nWorld Female Ranger Week was launched in 2021 by Holly Budge\, a British adventurer\, conservationist\, and the founder of How Many Elephants. Holly was inspired by the work of the Black Mambas Anti-Poaching Unit\, an all-female team protecting Balule Nature Reserve in South Africa. After meeting the Mambas in person\, she became determined to give female rangers the global recognition they deserved. \nHow Many Elephants was originally established in 2013 as an awareness campaign and design exhibition to communicate the scale of African elephant poaching\, with around 35\,000 elephants killed each year for ivory at the height of the trade. The charity expanded its remit to include direct support for female ranger units\, recognising that protecting elephants and other wildlife depends on supporting the people on the ground. \nSince 2021\, World Female Ranger Week has grown rapidly. It now features the World Female Ranger Awards\, a global showcase that recognises outstanding rangers and ranger units. The campaign has identified more than 5\,500 female rangers worldwide and continues to add to that number each year as visibility grows. \nNoteworthy Facts About World Female Ranger Week\n\nWorld Female Ranger Week was launched in 2021 by Holly Budge of How Many Elephants.\nWomen make up only around 11% of the global ranger workforce.\nThe Black Mambas APU\, established in 2013\, was one of the first all-female anti-poaching units and inspired the campaign.\nThe week has identified more than 5\,500 female rangers worldwide and runs the World Female Ranger Awards each year.\nHow Many Elephants was named to highlight the 35\,000 African elephants killed each year at the peak of the ivory trade.\n\nFrequently Asked Questions\nWhat is World Female Ranger Week?\nIt is an international awareness week dedicated to female wildlife rangers\, founded by How Many Elephants charity in 2021. \nWhen is World Female Ranger Week in 2026?\nIt runs from Monday 22 June to Sunday 28 June 2026\, with the official campaign also covering 23–30 June in some regions. \nWho organises World Female Ranger Week?\nThe week is organised by How Many Elephants\, a UK-registered charity founded by Holly Budge that works to combat the African elephant ivory trade and support front-line rangers. \nSpread the Word\nHelp raise awareness by sharing World Female Ranger Week with your friends\, family\, and followers. Use the hashtags #WorldFemaleRangerWeek and #WFRW2026 on social media. Every share helps fund and recognise the women on the front line of wildlife conservation. \nRelated Awareness Days\n\nWorld Bee Day – Another wildlife-focused observance highlighting threats to vital species.\nNational Allotments Week – A week celebrating biodiversity at the community level.\nInternational Day of Families – Recognises families\, including those whose livelihoods depend on protecting wildlife.\n\nLinks\n\nVisit the official World Female Ranger Week website\nExplore more awareness days at AwarenessDays.com
URL:https://www.awarenessdays.com/awareness-days-calendar/world-female-ranger-week/
LOCATION:International
CATEGORIES:Animals & Wildlife Awareness,International,June Awareness Days
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.awarenessdays.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/istock-951280044.jpg
GEO:37.09024;-95.712891
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260622
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20260629
DTSTAMP:20260520T205834
CREATED:20260505T140356Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260505T140356Z
UID:10021668-1782086400-1782691199@www.awarenessdays.com
SUMMARY:Rose Awareness Week
DESCRIPTION:Rose Awareness Week 2026 takes place from Monday 22 June to Sunday 28 June 2026. The week celebrates the UK’s most beloved garden flower\, with activities led by The Rose Society UK\, garden centres\, growers\, and horticultural charities. It is timed to coincide with the peak of the rose season\, when public and private gardens are full of bloom and fragrance. \nWhat is Rose Awareness Week?\nRose Awareness Week is an annual UK awareness week that promotes roses\, rose growing\, and the heritage and culture surrounding the flower. It is supported by The Rose Society UK\, British Garden Centres\, breeders such as Harkness and David Austin\, gardening charities\, and high-profile horticulturalists. The week is used to encourage people to plant\, prune\, and enjoy roses\, and to highlight the cultural and ecological role they play. \nWhen is Rose Awareness Week?\nRose Awareness Week 2026 runs from Monday 22 June to Sunday 28 June 2026. The week is held in the latter half of June each year\, deliberately positioned at the height of the rose flowering season in the UK and northern Europe. \nWhy Rose Awareness Week Matters\nThe rose is more than a pretty flower. It is a cornerstone of UK horticulture and a major contributor to the country’s gardens\, parks\, and public spaces. Roses provide habitat and food for pollinators\, are widely planted in memorial and community gardens\, and remain one of the most popular cut flowers in the world. Rose Awareness Week supports the British rose-growing industry\, including specialist nurseries that maintain heritage varieties\, and reminds gardeners that healthy roses are easier to grow than their reputation suggests. \nHow to Get Involved in Rose Awareness Week\nYou do not need a country garden to take part. Try one or several of the following: \n\nPlant a new rose – Late June is not the ideal planting time but it is a great moment to choose varieties for autumn planting. Visit a specialist nursery or garden centre and order ahead.\nVisit a famous rose garden – The Royal National Rose Garden at the Gardens of the Rose\, RHS Wisley\, Mottisfont Abbey\, and Regent’s Park’s Queen Mary’s Gardens all peak during the week.\nTry container roses – If you do not have a garden\, patio roses thrive in pots on balconies and small terraces. They flower for months and are easy to maintain.\nLearn to deadhead – Removing spent flowers extends the season and encourages new buds. The Rose Society UK has free guides on the technique.\nTake a rose photography walk – Visit local public gardens\, parks\, or cemeteries with old plantings. Use the week to record varieties and share them on social media.\nCook with roses – Edible rose petals are a classic British and Middle Eastern ingredient. Try rose syrup\, jam\, or shortbread\, using unsprayed petals from your own garden.\nDonate to a horticultural charity – Charities such as Greenfingers\, Thrive\, and Perennial use gardening to support disabled children\, mental health recovery\, and horticulturalists in financial hardship.\nJoin The Rose Society UK – Membership supports the work of preserving heritage roses and gives access to specialist talks\, garden tours\, and the annual show calendar.\n\nHistory of Rose Awareness Week\nThe rose has been cultivated in Britain for centuries. The Royal National Rose Society\, founded in 1876 in St Albans\, was for many decades the centre of UK rose growing\, with its Gardens of the Rose visited by enthusiasts from around the world. The society sadly entered insolvency in 2017\, though many of its gardens and collections were preserved. \nThe Rose Society UK was founded in 2018 by a group of growers and enthusiasts who wanted to safeguard the legacy of the Royal National Rose Society and provide a focal point for rose lovers in the modern era. Rose Awareness Week was developed as part of this work\, offering a national moment in the calendar to celebrate the flower and the people who grow it. \nThe week is supported by some of the UK’s most famous rose breeders\, including Harkness Roses and David Austin\, and by garden centre groups including British Garden Centres. Coverage in national press and gardening media has grown each year\, with TV gardeners such as David Domoney and Frances Tophill championing the week. \nNoteworthy Facts About Rose Awareness Week\n\nRose Awareness Week is supported by The Rose Society UK\, founded in 2018 to preserve and promote the heritage of British rose growing.\nThe Royal National Rose Society\, the world’s oldest specialist plant society\, was founded in St Albans in 1876.\nThe UK has more than 30\,000 named rose varieties\, ranging from heritage species roses to modern hybrid teas and English shrub roses.\nEngland’s national flower is the Tudor rose\, a heraldic combination of the red rose of Lancaster and the white rose of York.\nDavid Austin Roses\, founded in Shropshire in 1969\, is now a global brand and is responsible for many of the most popular modern English roses.\n\nFrequently Asked Questions\nWhat is Rose Awareness Week?\nRose Awareness Week is an annual UK awareness week celebrating roses\, rose growing\, and the heritage and culture surrounding Britain’s favourite flower. \nWhen is Rose Awareness Week in 2026?\nRose Awareness Week 2026 runs from Monday 22 June to Sunday 28 June 2026. \nWho organises Rose Awareness Week?\nThe week is supported by The Rose Society UK\, founded in 2018\, with backing from rose breeders\, garden centres\, and horticultural charities across the country. \nSpread the Word\nHelp raise awareness by sharing Rose Awareness Week with your friends\, family\, and followers. Use the hashtags #RoseAwarenessWeek and #RoseAwarenessWeek2026 on social media. Whether you grow a single climber or a full rose border\, every photo helps celebrate the flower. \nRelated Awareness Days\n\nNational Growing for Wellbeing Week – A complementary June week celebrating the mental health benefits of gardening.\nWorld Wellbeing Week – The global wellbeing week that includes time outdoors and in nature as a key theme.\nThe Big Lunch – A community celebration that often involves shared garden spaces and outdoor gatherings.\n\nLinks\n\nVisit The Rose Society UK\nExplore more awareness days at AwarenessDays.com
URL:https://www.awarenessdays.com/awareness-days-calendar/rose-awareness-week/
LOCATION:United Kingdom\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:Environment & Sustainability Awareness,June Awareness Days,United Kingdom
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.awarenessdays.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/istock-1413842363.jpg
GEO:55.378051;-3.435973
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260623
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20260624
DTSTAMP:20260520T205834
CREATED:20260505T135232Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260505T135232Z
UID:10021621-1782172800-1782259199@www.awarenessdays.com
SUMMARY:International Women in Engineering Day
DESCRIPTION:International Women in Engineering Day (INWED) takes place on Tuesday\, 23 June 2026\, marking the 13th annual celebration of women working in engineering across the world. Organised by the Women’s Engineering Society (WES)\, the day focuses global attention on the achievements of women engineers and the urgent need to attract more women into the profession. The 2026 theme is #EngineeringIntelligence. \nWhat is International Women in Engineering Day?\nInternational Women in Engineering Day is an awareness day dedicated to celebrating the work of women engineers and encouraging more girls and women to pursue engineering careers. The day is organised by the Women’s Engineering Society\, a UK-based charity founded in 1919\, and has UNESCO patronage. INWED highlights the gender imbalance in engineering and showcases the diverse career paths the profession offers\, from biomedical engineering to aerospace\, civil engineering\, and software development. \nWhen is International Women in Engineering Day?\nInternational Women in Engineering Day falls on Tuesday\, 23 June 2026. The date is fixed and never changes because it commemorates the founding of the Women’s Engineering Society on 23 June 1919\, when seven women including Lady Katharine Parsons and her daughter Rachel Parsons created the organisation in the wake of the First World War. \nWhy International Women in Engineering Day Matters\nDespite engineering being one of the most influential professions shaping modern life\, women remain significantly underrepresented. Across the UK\, women make up only around 16.5% of the engineering workforce\, and the figures are similar or lower in many other countries. With a global engineering skills shortage\, the case for bringing more women into the field is both moral and economic. INWED challenges the stereotype that engineering is a male profession and gives visibility to role models who can inspire the next generation of girls to consider technical careers. \nHow to Get Involved in International Women in Engineering Day\nThere are many meaningful ways to participate\, whether you are an engineer\, educator\, employer\, or supporter: \n\nUse the official hashtag – Share posts using #INWED2026 and #EngineeringIntelligence on LinkedIn\, X\, and Instagram to amplify the voices of women engineers in your network.\nProfile a woman engineer at your workplace – Run an internal campaign featuring the women engineers in your business\, highlighting their projects\, career paths\, and advice for newcomers.\nOrganise a school outreach session – Visit a local primary or secondary school to talk about engineering. Hands-on activities such as bridge-building challenges work well to engage younger students.\nHost a panel or webinar – Invite women engineers from different sectors to discuss their experiences\, the challenges they have faced\, and the opportunities they see ahead.\nMentor a young woman in STEM – Offer to mentor a student or early-career engineer through schemes such as the WES Mentoring Programme or the STEM Ambassadors network.\nDonate or fundraise for WES – The Women’s Engineering Society relies on donations to run scholarships\, awards\, and outreach. A small contribution helps fund the next generation of women engineers.\nAudit your workplace inclusion practices – Use the day as a prompt to review recruitment language\, parental leave\, flexible working\, and progression rates for women in technical roles.\n\nHistory of International Women in Engineering Day\nThe origins of INWED are tied to the founding story of the Women’s Engineering Society itself. WES was established on 23 June 1919 by a group of seven pioneering women who had seen women take on engineering work during the First World War\, only to face restrictions when men returned from the front. The society’s mission was to safeguard and expand the role of women in the profession. \nAlmost a century later\, in 2014\, WES celebrated its 95th anniversary. To mark the occasion\, then-president Dawn Bonfield MBE launched National Women in Engineering Day on 23 June 2014. The day proved an immediate success\, attracting attention from universities\, professional bodies\, and major engineering employers across the UK. \nIn 2016 the day received UNESCO patronage\, and the following year it became truly global\, rebranded as International Women in Engineering Day. Since then\, INWED has been marked by events in dozens of countries\, with engineering institutions in Australia\, the United States\, India\, and across Europe taking part. Each year a new theme drives the conversation. Past themes have included #InventorsAndInnovators\, #MakeSafetySeen\, and #EnhancedByEngineering. The 2026 theme\, #EngineeringIntelligence\, reflects the rapid rise of artificial intelligence and the need for diverse perspectives shaping the technologies of the future. \nNoteworthy Facts About International Women in Engineering Day\n\nINWED was founded in 2014 to mark the 95th anniversary of the Women’s Engineering Society.\nThe 2026 theme is #EngineeringIntelligence\, focusing on women shaping AI\, data\, and emerging technologies.\nWomen make up around 16.5% of the UK engineering workforce\, up from less than 10% a decade ago.\nWES was co-founded by Lady Katharine Parsons and her daughter Rachel Parsons\, who became its first president.\nUNESCO has officially patroned INWED since 2016\, helping the day grow internationally.\n\nFrequently Asked Questions\nWhat is International Women in Engineering Day?\nIt is an annual awareness day\, run by the Women’s Engineering Society\, that celebrates the achievements of women engineers and encourages more girls and women to enter the profession. \nWhen is International Women in Engineering Day in 2026?\nIt takes place on Tuesday\, 23 June 2026. The date is fixed every year because it is the anniversary of the founding of the Women’s Engineering Society in 1919. \nWho organises International Women in Engineering Day?\nThe day is organised by the Women’s Engineering Society (WES)\, a UK charity founded in 1919\, and is patronised by UNESCO. WES sets the annual theme and provides free resources for participants worldwide. \nSpread the Word\nHelp raise awareness by sharing International Women in Engineering Day with your friends\, family\, and followers. Use the hashtags #INWED2026 and #EngineeringIntelligence on social media. The more people who know about INWED\, the bigger the impact on the next generation of engineers. \nRelated Awareness Days\n\nWorld Metrology Day – Celebrates the science of measurement\, a foundation of all engineering disciplines.\nNational Science Week – Australia’s celebration of science and technology\, including engineering achievements.\nWright Brothers Day – Honours pioneering engineers and the birth of powered flight.\n\nLinks\n\nVisit the official International Women in Engineering Day website\nExplore more awareness days at AwarenessDays.com
URL:https://www.awarenessdays.com/awareness-days-calendar/international-women-in-engineering-day/
LOCATION:International
CATEGORIES:International,June Awareness Days,Science & Technology Awareness
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.awarenessdays.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/istock-1476720073.jpg
GEO:37.09024;-95.712891
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260623
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20260624
DTSTAMP:20260520T205834
CREATED:20260505T135855Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260505T135855Z
UID:10021648-1782172800-1782259199@www.awarenessdays.com
SUMMARY:International Widows Day
DESCRIPTION:International Widows Day is observed on 23 June each year. The United Nations day shines a light on the human rights issues\, poverty\, and stigma faced by hundreds of millions of widows around the world. In 2026 it falls on Tuesday 23 June. \nWhat is International Widows Day?\nInternational Widows Day is a United Nations observance dedicated to the rights and welfare of widows worldwide. It was established by the Loomba Foundation\, a UK-based charity founded by Lord Raj Loomba\, and was unanimously adopted by the UN General Assembly in 2010. The day calls on governments and international organisations to address the discrimination\, violence\, and economic insecurity that widows can face\, especially in countries where there is little legal protection for women after the death of a spouse. \nWhen is International Widows Day?\nInternational Widows Day takes place every year on 23 June. In 2026 it falls on a Tuesday. The Loomba Foundation\, the UN\, and partner organisations run events around the date\, with high-level meetings\, advocacy sessions\, and on-the-ground programmes for widows in dozens of countries. The official hashtag is #InternationalWidowsDay. \nWhy International Widows Day Matters\nThe Loomba Foundation estimates there are more than 258 million widows worldwide\, of whom over a tenth live in extreme poverty. Many widows face entrenched discrimination\, including loss of inheritance rights\, social exclusion\, harmful mourning rituals\, and exposure to gender-based violence. In some communities widows are blamed for their husband’s death\, denied access to family land\, and forced to leave their homes. Children of widows are often pulled out of school to support the household. The day exists to challenge those injustices and to fund practical support such as livelihood training\, scholarships for widows’ children\, and legal aid. \nHow to Get Involved in International Widows Day\nThere are practical ways for individuals\, employers\, faith communities\, and policymakers to take part: \n\nDonate to widows’ charities – The Loomba Foundation\, Widows for Peace through Democracy\, and Global Fund for Widows all support widows in low-income countries.\nSponsor a child of a widow – The Loomba Foundation runs scholarship programmes that keep children in school after the loss of a parent.\nShare survivor stories – Posting widow-led stories on social media with permission helps shift damaging stereotypes about widowhood.\nPush for legal reform – Lobby governments to ratify and enforce CEDAW\, ensure equal inheritance rights\, and outlaw harmful widowhood rituals.\nHost a community fundraiser – Schools\, employers\, and faith groups can run sponsored events on or around 23 June.\nSupport widow-owned businesses – Many widows in lower-income countries run small businesses; fair-trade purchasing channels income directly to them.\nTalk to widows in your own community – Many widows in higher-income countries also face isolation\, financial hardship\, and grief; checking in is a powerful first step.\n\nHistory of International Widows Day\nThe Loomba Foundation was established in 1997 in the UK by Raj and Veena Loomba\, in memory of Raj’s mother Pushpa Wati Loomba\, who was widowed in Punjab on 23 June 1954 and faced significant social and economic discrimination as a result. The Foundation was officially launched in 1998 by then UK Prime Minister Tony Blair and Cherie Blair CBE KC. From its earliest days the charity worked to support widows and their children in countries including India\, Bangladesh\, Sri Lanka\, Kenya\, South Africa\, and Uganda. \nThe Foundation began campaigning for a global day to highlight the rights of widows in 2005\, holding the first International Widows Day on 23 June that year. After a sustained five-year campaign\, on 21 December 2010 the United Nations General Assembly unanimously adopted resolution A/RES/65/189\, designating 23 June as International Widows Day and calling on member states to address the situation of widows. The first official UN-recognised International Widows Day was marked in 2011\, and the date now anchors year-round advocacy on widow rights. \nNoteworthy Facts About International Widows Day\n\nThe Loomba Foundation was launched in 1997 by Raj and Veena Loomba in the UK.\n23 June is the date Pushpa Wati Loomba\, Raj Loomba’s mother\, was widowed in 1954.\nThe UN General Assembly adopted International Widows Day on 21 December 2010.\nThere are more than 258 million widows worldwide\, according to the Loomba Foundation.\nThe Foundation has supported widows and their children in more than 16 countries.\n\nFrequently Asked Questions\nWhat is International Widows Day?\nA UN-recognised global day held on 23 June each year that highlights the rights and welfare of widows worldwide. \nWhen is International Widows Day in 2026?\nTuesday 23 June 2026. \nWho founded International Widows Day?\nThe Loomba Foundation\, established in 1997 by Lord Raj Loomba and his wife Veena Loomba in the UK. \nSpread the Word\nHelp raise awareness by sharing International Widows Day with your friends\, family\, and followers. Use the hashtag #InternationalWidowsDay on social media. The more people who challenge stigma around widowhood\, the more secure widows and their children become. \nRelated Awareness Days\n\nWorld Elder Abuse Awareness Day – Falls in the same week and highlights the abuse often faced by older widows.\nInternational Day of the Midwife – Recognises another vital role in supporting women through life’s transitions.\nWorld Mental Health Day – Highlights the bereavement\, isolation\, and grief that can follow widowhood.\n\nLinks\n\nVisit the official UN International Widows Day page\nExplore more awareness days at AwarenessDays.com
URL:https://www.awarenessdays.com/awareness-days-calendar/international-widows-day/
LOCATION:International
CATEGORIES:Community & Inclusion Awareness,International,June Awareness Days
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.awarenessdays.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/istock-1446888564.jpg
GEO:37.09024;-95.712891
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260624
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20260625
DTSTAMP:20260520T205834
CREATED:20260505T140114Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260505T140114Z
UID:10021658-1782259200-1782345599@www.awarenessdays.com
SUMMARY:St John's Day (Midsummer)
DESCRIPTION:St John’s Day\, also known as the Nativity of John the Baptist or Midsummer\, falls on 24 June each year. It is one of the oldest fixed feast days in the Christian calendar and is celebrated as a national holiday in countries including Spain\, Portugal\, Estonia\, Latvia\, Finland\, and Quebec. The day blends Christian and pre-Christian midsummer traditions and is marked by bonfires\, feasting\, and outdoor festivities. \nThe Story Behind St John’s Day\nSt John’s Day commemorates the birth of John the Baptist\, cousin of Jesus and the prophet who\, according to the Gospels\, baptised him in the River Jordan. According to the Gospel of Luke\, John was born six months before Jesus\, and the early Christian Church fixed his nativity on 24 June\, exactly six months before Christmas on 25 December. It is one of only three saints’ birthdays celebrated in the Western liturgical calendar\, alongside the births of Jesus and the Virgin Mary\, since most saints’ days commemorate the day they died. \nThe feast was established by the undivided Christian Church in the fourth century AD\, at a time when missionaries were spreading the faith into northern Europe. In the Roman calendar\, 24 June was the date traditionally associated with the summer solstice\, the longest day of the year. As Christianity spread\, it absorbed and reframed many of the existing midsummer celebrations\, and the feast of St John the Baptist became layered with older fire festivals\, herb-gathering rituals\, and water blessings that were once dedicated to pre-Christian gods. The combination is why St John’s Day is so closely tied to Midsummer across much of Europe. \nThe night before the feast\, Saint John’s Eve\, became a celebration in its own right. Across Catholic and Eastern Orthodox Europe\, communities lit huge bonfires\, known as the Fires of Saint John\, on the evening of 23 June. Young people would jump over the flames for luck\, herbs gathered on this night were said to have special properties\, and water blessed on the eve was used in healing rituals. Many of these traditions continue today\, sometimes with elaborate municipal celebrations and sometimes as small village customs. \nWhen and Where is St John’s Day Celebrated?\nSt John’s Day falls on 24 June every year. In 2026 it is observed on Wednesday 24 June\, with St John’s Eve on Tuesday 23 June. It is a public holiday in Quebec (Fête nationale)\, Catalonia\, Andorra\, Estonia\, Latvia\, and several Spanish and Portuguese cities. In Finland\, Sweden\, and Denmark\, the closely related Midsummer’s Eve and Midsummer’s Day are observed on the Friday and Saturday between 19 and 26 June. The official hashtag is #StJohnsDay or #Midsummer. \nTraditions and Customs\nThe way St John’s Day is marked varies enormously from one country to another\, but a handful of traditions appear again and again: \n\nBonfires (Fogueras de San Juan) – In Spain\, Portugal\, France\, and across northern Europe\, communities light large bonfires on the eve of St John’s Day; in Alicante the Fogueres de Sant Joan festival burns elaborate wooden monuments.\nJumping the fire – Tradition holds that leaping over a St John’s bonfire brings luck and purifies the jumper\, a custom particularly strong in Spain\, Portugal\, and the Basque Country.\nFloating candles or paper boats – In Latvia and Estonia\, candles are floated on rivers and lakes; in Brazil\, paper boats are sent down rivers to honour the saint.\nGathering St John’s Wort – The yellow-flowered plant Hypericum perforatum traditionally blooms around 24 June and was said to ward off evil; it remains a herbal remedy for low mood.\nFeasting on seasonal foods – In Portugal\, grilled sardines and bifana sandwiches are central to the night; in the Basque Country\, traditional cakes are shared with neighbours.\n\nWays to Celebrate St John’s Day\nYou do not have to live in a Catholic country to mark Midsummer; the day offers a cross-cultural reason to gather\, eat outside\, and welcome the start of summer: \n\nLight a small fire or candles – A garden brazier or a circle of candles can stand in for a community bonfire; just check your local fire safety rules.\nForage and dry St John’s wort – The plant grows widely in the UK and Europe and was historically gathered on this day; check forage guidance and never harvest from protected sites.\nCook a Portuguese-style sardine supper – Grilled sardines with crusty bread\, peppers\, and red wine echo the street parties of Lisbon and Porto.\nTake a midsummer walk – Use the longest light of the year to enjoy a long evening stroll\, especially near water or open countryside.\nVisit a midsummer event – Many UK cities host Scandinavian-themed midsummer markets\, particularly in Edinburgh\, London\, and Manchester.\nPlait a flower crown – A Scandinavian custom in which adults and children wear crowns of wildflowers; gather safely from your garden or local meadow.\n\nFacts and Figures\n\nSt John’s Day was established in the Christian calendar in the fourth century AD.\nIt falls exactly six months before Christmas\, in keeping with the Gospel of Luke’s account of John’s birth six months before Jesus.\nIt is a public holiday in Quebec\, Catalonia\, Andorra\, Estonia\, Latvia\, and several Spanish and Portuguese regions.\nThe Fogueres de Sant Joan in Alicante was declared a Festival of International Tourist Interest in 1983.\nSt John’s Wort (Hypericum perforatum) takes its name from blooming around 24 June.\n\nFrequently Asked Questions\nWhat is St John’s Day?\nThe Christian feast of the Nativity of John the Baptist\, observed on 24 June each year and closely associated with European midsummer celebrations. \nWhen is St John’s Day in 2026?\nWednesday 24 June 2026\, with St John’s Eve falling on Tuesday 23 June. \nWhy is St John’s Day linked to midsummer?\nThe 24 June date sits within the traditional midsummer period\, and as Christianity spread across Europe\, the feast absorbed many older summer solstice customs such as bonfires\, herb gathering\, and night-time celebrations. \nSpread the Word\nShare St John’s Day with your community using #StJohnsDay and #Midsummer. Whether you mark the occasion with a small bonfire\, a long evening walk\, or a Portuguese-style sardine supper\, every celebration helps keep this layered tradition alive. \nRelated Awareness Days\n\nEarly May Bank Holiday – Another seasonal celebration\, marking the start of summer in the UK.\nCinco de Mayo – A heritage celebration with deep roots in Mexican and Mexican-American culture.\nWorld Biodiversity Day – Falls in late spring and celebrates the natural world that midsummer rituals are tied to.\n\nLinks\n\nExplore more awareness days at AwarenessDays.com
URL:https://www.awarenessdays.com/awareness-days-calendar/st-johns-day-midsummer/
LOCATION:International
CATEGORIES:International,June Awareness Days,Seasonal Celebrations
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.awarenessdays.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/istock-507261230.jpg
GEO:37.09024;-95.712891
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260624
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20260625
DTSTAMP:20260520T205834
CREATED:20260505T140728Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260505T140728Z
UID:10021679-1782259200-1782345599@www.awarenessdays.com
SUMMARY:National Writing Day
DESCRIPTION:National Writing Day takes place on Wednesday\, 24 June 2026\, the UK’s annual celebration of the power and pleasure of creative writing. Run by the charity First Story\, the day invites people of all ages\, backgrounds\, and abilities to pick up a pen\, pencil\, or laptop and put words on the page. Schools\, libraries\, writers\, and workplaces across the country take part with workshops\, prompts\, and shared writing experiences. \nWhat is National Writing Day?\nNational Writing Day is a UK awareness day dedicated to creative writing and the joy of telling stories. It is run by First Story\, a charity that places writers in residence in state secondary schools serving low-income communities. The day’s central message is simple: everyone has a story to tell. National Writing Day encourages people to write for fun\, for self-expression\, for connection\, or simply for the satisfaction of putting one word in front of another. \nWhen is National Writing Day?\nNational Writing Day in 2026 falls on Wednesday\, 24 June 2026. The date moves slightly each year as it is set on the fourth Wednesday of June by First Story\, allowing schools to plan classroom activities during summer term. \n\n\n\nYear\nDate\n\n\n\n\n2026\nWednesday\, 24 June\n\n\n2027\nWednesday\, 23 June\n\n\n2028\nWednesday\, 28 June\n\n\n2029\nWednesday\, 27 June\n\n\n2030\nWednesday\, 26 June\n\n\n\nWhy National Writing Day Matters\nWriting is one of the most powerful tools we have for thinking\, learning\, and connecting with others. Yet research from the National Literacy Trust consistently shows that fewer than three in ten children and young people enjoy writing in their free time. National Writing Day exists to change that\, by putting writing into the hands of young people in joyful\, low-pressure ways. The day also celebrates writing as a lifelong skill that supports careers\, mental health\, and creative expression for adults too. \nHow to Get Involved in National Writing Day\nThere are many ways to take part\, whether you are a teacher\, parent\, writer\, or office worker: \n\nWrite for ten minutes – Set a timer\, choose a prompt from the First Story website\, and write whatever comes to mind. No editing\, no judgment.\nRun a writing workshop – Schools\, libraries\, and community groups can use First Story’s free resources to host workshops on poetry\, short fiction\, memoir\, or letter writing.\nTake part in #WriteHere – First Story runs annual social media campaigns inviting writers to share short pieces using set prompts. Look out for the year’s hashtags on the official website.\nWrite a letter – Send a real letter to a friend\, relative\, or someone you admire. Handwritten letters have rare power in a digital age.\nStart a journal – Use the day to begin a daily or weekly journaling habit. Even five minutes a day builds reflection and resilience.\nSubmit to a competition – Many writing competitions for young people and adults open or close around National Writing Day\, including the First Story Young Writers’ Festival.\nDonate to First Story – The charity places professional writers in schools serving low-income communities. Donations help fund residencies\, anthologies\, and writing festivals.\n\nHistory of National Writing Day\nNational Writing Day was launched in 2017 by First Story\, a UK charity founded in 2008 by Katie Waldegrave and writer William Fiennes. First Story was set up to bring professional writers into state secondary schools in challenging circumstances\, to inspire students who might not otherwise see themselves as writers. The charity has grown into one of the UK’s most respected literary education organisations\, working with hundreds of schools and producing thousands of student-written books each year. \nThe first National Writing Day saw thousands of people take part\, with schools\, libraries\, and individuals sharing writing online and in person. Each year the campaign has expanded\, with celebrity authors\, public figures\, and major UK institutions endorsing it. The British Library\, the National Literacy Trust\, and the Royal Society of Literature have all supported National Writing Day\, alongside high-profile authors who share writing prompts and pieces. \nPast themes and prompts have ranged from “Writing about home” to “Writing the future” and “Stories from where you are”. The day has become a fixed point in the literary calendar\, and many schools now use it as a launchpad for end-of-year creative writing showcases. \nNoteworthy Facts About National Writing Day\n\nNational Writing Day was launched in 2017 by First Story\, a UK literary education charity.\nFirst Story was founded in 2008 by Katie Waldegrave and the writer William Fiennes.\nThe day falls on the fourth Wednesday of June each year.\nThe campaign’s central message is “Everyone has a story to tell”.\nNational Writing Day is supported by leading authors\, publishers\, and the National Literacy Trust.\n\nFrequently Asked Questions\nWhat is National Writing Day?\nIt is the UK’s annual celebration of creative writing\, run by the charity First Story\, encouraging people of all ages and backgrounds to write for pleasure. \nWhen is National Writing Day in 2026?\nNational Writing Day takes place on Wednesday\, 24 June 2026. \nWho organises National Writing Day?\nThe day is organised by First Story\, a UK charity that places professional writers in residence in state secondary schools. \nSpread the Word\nHelp raise awareness by sharing National Writing Day with your friends\, family\, and followers. Use the hashtags #NationalWritingDay and #WriteDay2026 on social media. Every story shared\, every poem posted\, and every prompt picked up adds to a national celebration of writing. \nRelated Awareness Days\n\nChildren’s Book Week – A natural partner observance for those who love stories.\nInternational Literacy Day – The UN’s global day for reading and writing.\nNational Teacher Day in the USA – Honours educators\, including those who introduce students to writing.\n\nLinks\n\nVisit the official National Writing Day page at First Story\nExplore more awareness days at AwarenessDays.com
URL:https://www.awarenessdays.com/awareness-days-calendar/national-writing-day/
LOCATION:United Kingdom\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:Arts, Culture & Heritage,June Awareness Days,United Kingdom
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.awarenessdays.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/istock-2229085453-1.jpg
GEO:55.378051;-3.435973
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260624
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20260701
DTSTAMP:20260520T205834
CREATED:20260505T135054Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260505T135054Z
UID:10021618-1782259200-1782863999@www.awarenessdays.com
SUMMARY:World Wellbeing Week
DESCRIPTION:World Wellbeing Week takes place from 24 to 30 June 2026\, marking a global call for individuals\, employers\, and communities to consider the many dimensions of wellbeing. Founded in 2019\, the week brings together HR teams\, wellbeing leads\, charities\, and businesses to highlight physical health\, mental health\, social connection\, purpose\, financial security\, and sustainable ways of working. \nWhat is World Wellbeing Week?\nWorld Wellbeing Week is an annual global awareness campaign that celebrates wellbeing in all its forms. It is hosted by WellBeing World\, a Jersey-based organisation founded by Beverley Le Cuirot FRSPH\, and is supported by employers\, charities\, public sector bodies\, and wellbeing professionals across more than 100 countries. The week encourages workplaces to reflect on the policies\, environments\, and cultures that help people thrive\, while also reminding individuals to invest time in their own health and happiness. \nWhen is World Wellbeing Week?\nWorld Wellbeing Week 2026 runs from Wednesday 24 June to Tuesday 30 June 2026. The week falls in late June each year\, deliberately positioned around the summer solstice to encourage reflection at the midpoint of the calendar. \nWhy World Wellbeing Week Matters\nWellbeing is no longer a soft topic at the edges of working life. According to the World Health Organization\, depression and anxiety cost the global economy an estimated US$1 trillion each year in lost productivity\, while in the UK the Health and Safety Executive reported 1.7 million workers suffering from a work-related illness in the most recent reporting year\, with stress\, depression\, or anxiety accounting for around half of all cases. World Wellbeing Week gives organisations a focal point to assess what they are doing well\, identify gaps\, and commit to changes that improve daily life for employees and the people they serve. \nHow to Get Involved in World Wellbeing Week\nThere are many ways for individuals\, teams\, and organisations to mark the week meaningfully: \n\nRun a wellbeing audit – Use the week as a deadline to review your organisation’s wellbeing strategy\, benefits\, and policies. Look at workload\, flexibility\, manager training\, and access to mental health support.\nHost daily themed sessions – Build a programme around the seven pillars of wellbeing: physical\, mental\, social\, financial\, career\, community\, and environmental. Allocate one focus per day with talks\, workshops\, or shared resources.\nEncourage movement breaks – Block out 10 to 15 minutes in the working day for walking meetings\, desk stretches\, or short outdoor breaks. Movement reduces musculoskeletal strain and lifts mood.\nOpen conversations about mental health – Invite a mental health charity or trained speaker to talk to your team. Normalising the conversation makes it easier for colleagues to ask for help.\nPromote sleep and rest – Share guidance on sleep hygiene\, encourage proper lunch breaks\, and discourage out-of-hours messaging during the week and beyond.\nSupport financial wellbeing – Money worries are one of the biggest drivers of stress. Offer access to free financial guidance services or run a session on budgeting\, savings\, and pensions.\nRecognise and thank colleagues – A simple culture of appreciation has a measurable effect on engagement. Use the week to send thank-you notes\, shoutouts\, or peer-to-peer recognition.\nVolunteer together – Community connection is a core pillar of wellbeing. Use a paid volunteering day to support a local cause as a team.\n\nHistory of World Wellbeing Week\nWorld Wellbeing Week was launched in 2019 by Beverley Le Cuirot\, founder of WellBeing World and WellBeing At Work. The first week grew out of work that had begun in 2011 in Jersey\, Channel Islands\, where WellBeing World was established as a not-for-profit organisation devoted to promoting personal\, corporate\, and societal wellbeing. \nThe campaign was designed from the start to be inclusive and free for organisations of any size to take part. Rather than dictating a single theme\, World Wellbeing Week organises content around the multiple dimensions of wellbeing\, allowing each participating organisation to shape its own programme. This approach has helped the week scale rapidly: by 2024 organisers reported that the campaign had reached more than 58 million people through social and non-social media combined\, an unprecedented milestone for a non-commercial wellbeing initiative. \nThe week has also become a fixture in the wellbeing calendars published by major HR software vendors\, occupational health providers\, and government bodies. It now sits alongside Mental Health Awareness Week and Stress Awareness Month as one of the anchor moments of the workplace wellbeing year. \nNoteworthy Facts About World Wellbeing Week\n\nWorld Wellbeing Week was founded in 2019 by Beverley Le Cuirot FRSPH and is run by WellBeing World\, a not-for-profit organisation based in Jersey\, Channel Islands.\nThe week is observed in late June each year\, anchored around the summer solstice in the Northern Hemisphere.\nThe 2024 campaign reached approximately 58 million people across social and non-social media\, the highest figure recorded by the organisers.\nParticipation is free\, with downloadable resources\, social media templates\, and a workplace guide available from the official website.\nThe campaign promotes seven pillars of wellbeing: physical\, mental\, emotional\, social\, financial\, career\, and community wellbeing.\n\nFrequently Asked Questions\nWhat is World Wellbeing Week?\nWorld Wellbeing Week is a global awareness week\, held annually in late June\, that promotes wellbeing in all its forms. It is supported by employers\, charities\, and individuals in more than 100 countries. \nWhen is World Wellbeing Week in 2026?\nWorld Wellbeing Week 2026 runs from Wednesday 24 June to Tuesday 30 June 2026. \nWho organises World Wellbeing Week?\nWorld Wellbeing Week is organised by WellBeing World\, a not-for-profit organisation founded by Beverley Le Cuirot in 2011 and based in Jersey\, Channel Islands. The awareness week itself was launched in 2019. \nSpread the Word\nHelp raise awareness by sharing World Wellbeing Week with your friends\, family\, and colleagues. Use the hashtags #WorldWellbeingWeek and #WorldWellbeingWeek2026 on social media. The more workplaces and individuals who take part\, the bigger the impact on lives and communities. \nRelated Awareness Days\n\nResilience Week – A complementary awareness week focused on building personal and community resilience.\nNational Growing for Wellbeing Week – A UK week celebrating the mental health benefits of gardening and growing your own food.\nWorld Meditation Day – An annual day promoting mindfulness and meditation as tools for everyday wellbeing.\n\nLinks\n\nVisit the official World Wellbeing Week website\nExplore more awareness days at AwarenessDays.com
URL:https://www.awarenessdays.com/awareness-days-calendar/world-wellbeing-week/
LOCATION:International
CATEGORIES:Health & Wellbeing Awareness,International,June Awareness Days
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.awarenessdays.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/istock-2151032247.jpg
GEO:37.09024;-95.712891
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260625
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20260626
DTSTAMP:20260520T205834
CREATED:20260505T135940Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260505T135940Z
UID:10021650-1782345600-1782431999@www.awarenessdays.com
SUMMARY:Leon Day
DESCRIPTION:Leon Day takes place on Thursday\, 25 June 2026\, marking exactly six months until Christmas Day. The name is “Noel” spelled backwards\, a quiet nod to the holiday that sits on the opposite side of the calendar. The day has become a quirky favourite among Christmas enthusiasts\, who use it as an excuse to plan ahead\, listen to carols in summer\, or simply count down to December. \nHow to Celebrate Leon Day\nLeon Day is all about a cheeky burst of Christmas spirit in mid-summer. Here are some fun ways to mark it: \n\nPlay Christmas music – Put on Bing Crosby\, Mariah Carey\, or your favourite festive playlist while you cook dinner or drive to work. The contrast of carols on a sunny June evening is part of the charm.\nWatch a Christmas film – Pull out “It’s a Wonderful Life”\, “Elf”\, “The Muppet Christmas Carol”\, or whichever Christmas film you love best. Many streaming services keep festive favourites available year-round.\nStart your Christmas shopping – Six months out is the perfect time to begin buying gifts at a relaxed pace. You will avoid the December rush and have time to find thoughtful\, well-made presents.\nPlan your Christmas budget – Use Leon Day to set a savings goal for December. Even putting aside a small amount each month from now will make Christmas spending stress-free.\nBake Christmas treats – Mince pies\, gingerbread\, or stollen taste just as good in summer. Bake a batch and surprise friends with a dose of Christmas in June.\nBegin a homemade gift – Knitting\, sewing\, woodwork\, or other handmade gifts often need months to complete. Leon Day is the perfect prompt to start a project for someone special.\nSend a Christmas-in-July card – Post a card to a friend or family member just for fun. They will love the surprise.\nPlan a Leon Day party – Invite friends round for a Christmas-themed BBQ\, complete with mulled wine slushies and Mariah Carey on repeat.\n\nWhat is Leon Day?\nLeon Day is an unofficial American holiday observed on 25 June each year. The name comes from “Noel” spelled backwards\, and it marks exactly six months until Christmas Day on 25 December. The day is unofficial\, light-hearted\, and loved by Christmas enthusiasts who do not need much excuse to enjoy a touch of festive cheer in the middle of summer. \nWhen is Leon Day?\nLeon Day takes place on Thursday\, 25 June 2026. The date is fixed every year because it always falls exactly six months before Christmas Day. \nThe History of Leon Day\nThe origins of Leon Day are murky\, but the day appears to have emerged in the United States in the late 20th century. A radio station in Utica\, New York is recorded as celebrating Leon Day as early as 1984\, and references to the day grew through the early 1990s as Christmas enthusiasts shared the idea on bulletin boards and online forums. \nThe tradition gained momentum among Christmas hobbyists\, including collectors\, choir members\, and people who run Christmas-themed websites and forums. Over time\, Leon Day has appeared on national day calendars and gained a quirky cult following\, complete with greeting cards\, T-shirts\, and themed playlists. \nSome Christmas communities now extend Leon Day across two days\, 24 and 25 June\, mirroring Christmas Eve and Christmas Day. The day is unofficial and has no central organising body\, which is part of its charm. It belongs to anyone who wants to enjoy a half-Christmas moment in summer. \nFun Facts About Leon Day\n\nLeon Day is “Noel” (a traditional name for Christmas) spelled backwards.\nIt falls exactly six months before Christmas Day.\nA radio station in Utica\, New York was celebrating Leon Day as early as 1984.\nSome Christmas enthusiasts celebrate Leon Day across two days\, mirroring Christmas Eve and Christmas Day.\nLeon Day has no official organiser or central event\, which makes it a true grassroots celebration.\nThe day is often used to start handmade Christmas gift projects that need time to complete.\n\nWhy Leon Day Matters\nLeon Day is not a serious cause\, but it gives Christmas lovers a sanctioned moment to indulge their favourite holiday outside of December. It is also a useful prompt for the practical side of Christmas: starting your shopping\, saving money\, or planning your festive logistics. A small dose of Christmas in June can lift a midsummer mood and remind us that the festive season is closer than we think. \nFrequently Asked Questions\nWhat is Leon Day?\nLeon Day is an unofficial American holiday on 25 June that marks the halfway point to Christmas. The name is “Noel” spelled backwards. \nWhen is Leon Day in 2026?\nLeon Day takes place on Thursday\, 25 June 2026. \nWhy is it called Leon Day?\n“Leon” is “Noel” (a traditional French and English word for Christmas) spelled backwards\, reflecting that the day sits exactly opposite Christmas on the calendar. \nSpread the Word\nJoin the celebration and share your Christmas-in-June moments on social media with #LeonDay and #LeonDay2026. Tag your friends and challenge them to break out the Christmas films and start their festive planning early. \nRelated Awareness Days\n\nHalloween – Another seasonal celebration that lights up the calendar with costume\, decoration\, and tradition.\nBlack Friday – For those who use Leon Day to start Christmas shopping early.\nNational Emo Day – A quirky December observance with the same playful spirit as Leon Day.\n\nLinks\n\nRead more about Leon Day at National Day Calendar\nExplore more awareness days at AwarenessDays.com
URL:https://www.awarenessdays.com/awareness-days-calendar/leon-day/
LOCATION:United States\, United States
CATEGORIES:Fun & Quirky Awareness Days,June Awareness Days,United States
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.awarenessdays.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/istock-1447324568.jpg
GEO:37.09024;-95.712891
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260625
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20260626
DTSTAMP:20260520T205834
CREATED:20260505T140108Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260505T140108Z
UID:10021656-1782345600-1782431999@www.awarenessdays.com
SUMMARY:Global Beatles Day
DESCRIPTION:Global Beatles Day takes place on 25 June every year and celebrates the music\, message\, and lasting influence of the Beatles. Founded in 2009 by American fan Faith Cohen\, the day is a non-commercial\, fan-led tribute to one of the most influential bands in popular music history. \nThe Story Behind Global Beatles Day\nGlobal Beatles Day began as a heartfelt thank-you. Faith Cohen\, a Beatles fan from Indianapolis\, Indiana\, founded the day in 2009 as what she described as a love letter to the band that had shaped her life and the lives of millions. Cohen used social media to invite fans worldwide to mark a single day devoted to the Beatles’ music and the values it represented. From a small grassroots launch\, the day quickly attracted attention from fan clubs\, radio stations\, and eventually mainstream music coverage. \nCohen chose 25 June for a specific reason. On that day in 1967\, the Beatles appeared on Our World\, the first live international satellite television broadcast\, performing “All You Need Is Love” to an estimated audience of 400 million people across more than twenty countries. The performance\, beamed from London to viewers around the globe\, has become one of the defining moments of 1960s counterculture and a symbol of music’s ability to cross borders. \nCohen has been clear about the day’s purpose. Global Beatles Day is meant to be a non-commercial holiday devoid of trivialisation\, with no merchandise marketing\, look-alike contests\, or tribute-band gimmicks. Instead\, it asks fans to listen\, reflect\, and share the band’s message of peace\, love\, and global understanding. \nWhen and Where is Global Beatles Day Celebrated?\nGlobal Beatles Day takes place on Thursday\, 25 June 2026. The date is fixed each year. While the day was created in the United States\, it is celebrated worldwide\, with particularly strong observance in the United Kingdom\, the United States\, Latin America\, and Japan\, all places where the Beatles have huge and active fan communities. Liverpool\, the band’s home city\, often becomes a focal point for celebrations. \nTraditions and Customs\nThe day has built up a number of fan traditions over the years. \n\nListening to “All You Need Is Love” – Fans worldwide play the song that was performed on the original 25 June 1967 broadcast.\nHosting album listening parties – Whether Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band\, Abbey Road\, or The White Album\, fans gather to listen to a full record together.\nVisiting Beatles landmarks – The Cavern Club\, Strawberry Field\, Penny Lane\, and Abbey Road become especially busy on the day.\nSharing on social media – Fans post their favourite songs\, lyrics\, photos\, and memories using the official hashtags.\nSpreading peace and love – In the spirit of the day\, many fans choose a small act of kindness to mark it\, in keeping with the values Cohen put at the heart of the holiday.\n\nWays to Celebrate Global Beatles Day\nYou don’t need to be a lifelong fan to take part. Here are some ideas. \n\nListen to a Beatles album from start to finish – Resist the temptation to skip and let the album work as a whole. Revolver and Abbey Road are great places to start.\nWatch a Beatles documentary – Peter Jackson’s Get Back (2021) shows the band recording Let It Be\, while Eight Days a Week covers their touring years.\nRead about the band – Mark Lewisohn’s Tune In is widely considered the most thorough biography. Hunter Davies’s authorised biography from 1968 remains a classic.\nVisit Liverpool – The Beatles Story museum\, the Magical Mystery Tour bus\, and a guided walk around the band’s haunts make for a perfect Beatles day out.\nSing or play with friends – Even amateur sing-alongs of “Hey Jude” or “Let It Be” capture the spirit of the day.\nIntroduce someone new to the music – Share a playlist with a younger family member or colleague who has never properly listened to the band.\n\nFacts and Figures\n\nThe Beatles formed in Liverpool in 1960 and disbanded in 1970\, releasing thirteen studio albums in that decade.\nTheir performance of “All You Need Is Love” on Our World on 25 June 1967 was watched by an estimated 400 million people\, then a record television audience.\nThe Beatles have sold an estimated 600 million records worldwide\, making them the best-selling band in music history.\nThe band has had 20 number one singles on the Billboard Hot 100 in the United States\, more than any other artist.\n“Yesterday” by Paul McCartney is one of the most covered songs of all time\, with more than 2\,200 recorded versions.\n\nFrequently Asked Questions\nWhat is Global Beatles Day?\nGlobal Beatles Day is an annual fan-led celebration of the Beatles\, their music\, and their message of peace\, love\, and global unity. It is held on 25 June every year. \nWhen is Global Beatles Day in 2026?\nIt falls on Thursday\, 25 June 2026. \nWhy is 25 June the date for Global Beatles Day?\nThe date marks the anniversary of the Beatles’ performance of “All You Need Is Love” on the Our World live international television broadcast on 25 June 1967. \nSpread the Word\nShare Global Beatles Day with your community using #GlobalBeatlesDay and #GlobalBeatlesDay2026. Whether you mark the occasion with a favourite song\, a Liverpool visit\, or a small act of kindness\, every bit of awareness helps keep the band’s message alive. \nRelated Awareness Days\n\nWorld Day for Cultural Diversity for Dialogue and Development – Connects to the Beatles’ role in opening Western audiences to global music traditions.\nChildren’s Book Week – A fellow cultural celebration of creative work that spans generations.\nNational Tom Sawyer Day – Another tribute to a much-loved cultural icon\, marking the lasting power of storytelling.\n\nLinks\n\nVisit the official Global Beatles Day website\nExplore more awareness days at AwarenessDays.com
URL:https://www.awarenessdays.com/awareness-days-calendar/global-beatles-day/
LOCATION:International
CATEGORIES:Arts, Culture & Heritage,International,June Awareness Days
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.awarenessdays.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/istock-1497251949.jpg
GEO:37.09024;-95.712891
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260625
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20260626
DTSTAMP:20260520T205834
CREATED:20260505T140507Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260505T150408Z
UID:10021671-1782345600-1782431999@www.awarenessdays.com
SUMMARY:Day of the Seafarer
DESCRIPTION:Day of the Seafarer takes place on Thursday\, 25 June 2026\, recognising the contribution of the world’s 1.9 million seafarers to global trade and the wider economy. Established by the International Maritime Organization (IMO) in 2010\, the day acknowledges the often invisible workforce that keeps ships moving across the world’s oceans\, often spending months at sea away from family and friends. The 2026 theme aligns with the World Maritime Day theme “From Policy to Practice: Powering Maritime Excellence”. \nWhat is Day of the Seafarer?\nDay of the Seafarer is an annual UN observance led by the International Maritime Organization (IMO)\, the UN agency responsible for shipping safety and security and the prevention of marine pollution by ships. The day honours seafarers worldwide and draws attention to their working conditions\, mental health\, safety\, and the critical role they play in moving more than 80% of global trade by sea. \nWhen is Day of the Seafarer?\nDay of the Seafarer takes place on Thursday\, 25 June 2026. The date is fixed every year and was chosen to mark the adoption of the 2010 amendments to the International Convention on Standards of Training\, Certification and Watchkeeping for Seafarers (STCW)\, agreed in Manila on 25 June 2010. \nWhy Day of the Seafarer Matters\nThe world depends on seafarers. From the food on our supermarket shelves to the fuel powering our cars and the medicines in our pharmacies\, more than 80% of global trade is carried by ship. Yet seafarers are often invisible to the public and face unique challenges\, including extended periods away from home\, isolation\, fatigue\, and at times poor working conditions. The COVID-19 pandemic exposed many of these issues when hundreds of thousands of seafarers were stranded at sea due to crew change crises. Day of the Seafarer raises awareness of these realities and pushes for better protection\, fair contracts\, and greater public appreciation. \nHow to Get Involved in Day of the Seafarer\nThere are many practical ways to mark the day: \n\nUse the official campaign hashtag – Share posts thanking seafarers using #DayOfTheSeafarer and the IMO’s annual themed hashtag\, which is updated each year.\nSupport a seafarers’ charity – The Mission to Seafarers\, Sailors’ Society\, and Stella Maris provide welfare\, chaplaincy\, and emergency support to seafarers in ports worldwide. Donations and volunteering directly help seafarers in need.\nVisit a seafarers’ centre – Many port cities have seafarers’ centres open to the public. They offer a glimpse into life at sea and the work that supports it.\nPromote the day at maritime workplaces – Shipping companies\, ports\, freight forwarders\, and maritime training colleges can host events\, share stories\, and recognise seafaring colleagues.\nEducate yourself and others – Read about the Maritime Labour Convention 2006\, the global agreement that sets minimum standards for seafarers’ working conditions.\nSend a thank-you message – The IMO often runs a “Send a message to a seafarer” campaign\, allowing the public to send notes of appreciation that are shared on board ships.\nBuy responsibly – Use the day as a prompt to think about the global supply chains behind the goods you buy and the people who move them.\n\nHistory of Day of the Seafarer\nDay of the Seafarer was adopted by the International Maritime Organization in 2010 during the Diplomatic Conference held in Manila\, the Philippines\, where amendments to the STCW Convention were agreed. The conference recognised the unique contribution of seafarers\, particularly given that many maritime professionals come from developing nations where seafaring is a vital source of national income. \nEach year the IMO sets a theme that reflects priorities for the maritime industry. Past themes have addressed bullying and harassment at sea\, fair treatment of seafarers\, mental health\, and the future of the maritime workforce. The 2026 day aligns with the broader World Maritime Day theme “From Policy to Practice: Powering Maritime Excellence”\, which highlights how seafarers translate international rules into everyday safe and efficient operations. \nThe day has grown considerably since its launch. Governments\, shipping companies\, port authorities\, and seafarers’ charities take part in events worldwide. Social media campaigns have allowed the public to engage directly with seafarers\, building bridges between the industry and the wider community. \nNoteworthy Facts About Day of the Seafarer\n\nDay of the Seafarer was established by the IMO in 2010 and is observed every 25 June.\nThere are an estimated 1.9 million seafarers worldwide working on the global merchant fleet.\nMore than 80% of global trade by volume is carried by sea.\nThe Maritime Labour Convention 2006\, often called the “Seafarers’ Bill of Rights”\, sets out minimum working and living conditions for seafarers.\nThe 2026 theme aligns with World Maritime Day’s “From Policy to Practice: Powering Maritime Excellence”.\n\nFrequently Asked Questions\nWhat is Day of the Seafarer?\nIt is an annual UN observance led by the International Maritime Organization that honours the world’s seafarers and recognises their contribution to global trade and the wider economy. \nWhen is Day of the Seafarer in 2026?\nDay of the Seafarer takes place on Thursday\, 25 June 2026. \nWho organises Day of the Seafarer?\nThe day is organised by the International Maritime Organization (IMO)\, the UN agency responsible for the safety and security of shipping and the prevention of marine pollution by ships. \nSpread the Word\nHelp raise awareness by sharing Day of the Seafarer with your friends\, family\, and followers. Use the hashtag #DayOfTheSeafarer on social media. Every share helps recognise the people whose work keeps the world moving. \nRelated Awareness Days\n\nNational Maritime Day in the USA – The American counterpart honouring the merchant marine industry.\nWorld Refugee Day – Highlights people displaced by sea\, often rescued by merchant seafarers.\nWorld Bee Day – Another UN-recognised observance highlighting an often unseen workforce.\n\nLinks\n\nVisit the official IMO Day of the Seafarer page\nExplore more awareness days at AwarenessDays.com
URL:https://www.awarenessdays.com/awareness-days-calendar/day-of-the-seafarer/
LOCATION:International
CATEGORIES:Global & National Days,International,June Awareness Days
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.awarenessdays.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/07/2012_dosf_banner_1.jpg
GEO:37.09024;-95.712891
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260625
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20260626
DTSTAMP:20260520T205834
CREATED:20260505T140900Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260505T150411Z
UID:10021684-1782345600-1782431999@www.awarenessdays.com
SUMMARY:National Handshake Day
DESCRIPTION:National Handshake Day takes place on Thursday 25 June 2026. The day\, observed annually on the last Thursday of June\, recognises one of humanity’s oldest and most universal greetings. From medieval knights checking for hidden daggers to modern boardroom introductions\, the handshake has carried symbolic weight for thousands of years. \nHow to Celebrate National Handshake Day\nThis is a deliberately simple day\, but there is plenty you can do to mark it: \n\nGreet new colleagues properly – Introduce yourself with a firm but not crushing handshake\, eye contact\, and a clear statement of your name. The simple ritual still makes a strong first impression.\nReach out to a contact you have not seen – The day is a good prompt to message a former colleague or business contact and propose a coffee. The handshake at the end is the best part.\nPractise with children – Handshakes are still a useful life skill. Spend a few minutes coaching kids on a confident greeting\, eye contact\, and how to introduce themselves.\nReflect on alternatives – Since the COVID-19 pandemic many people prefer fist bumps\, elbow taps\, or namaste-style greetings. Use the day to think about which greeting feels right for which context.\nTry a sports tradition – Many sports include a post-match handshake as a sign of respect. If you play a sport\, lean into the gesture today.\nWatch a famous handshake – From the 1953 armistice signed at Panmunjom to the Mandela-de Klerk handshake of 1990 and the Trump-Kim summit of 2018\, history’s most charged handshakes are easy to find online.\nImprove your grip strength – Grip strength is a marker of overall health and longevity. Use the day as a small motivation to add a few exercises to your week.\nTalk about cultural differences – Handshakes are not universal. Use the day to learn about greetings in cultures you visit or work with\, including bows\, hand on heart\, and namaste.\n\nWhat is National Handshake Day?\nNational Handshake Day is a US observance celebrating the handshake as a tool of human connection\, business etiquette\, and cultural ritual. It is used by employers\, etiquette coaches\, and writers to highlight the value of a confident\, considered greeting in everyday life. \nWhen is National Handshake Day?\nNational Handshake Day 2026 falls on Thursday 25 June 2026. The day is observed annually on the last Thursday of June. The pattern means the date moves each year. \nThe History of National Handshake Day\nThe handshake itself is one of the oldest gestures in recorded history. A ninth-century-BCE relief sculpture depicts an Assyrian king clasping hands with a Babylonian ruler to seal an alliance\, and Greek funerary art from the fourth and fifth centuries BCE shows handshakes as symbols of friendship and loyalty. Ancient Roman writers describe the gesture in similar terms. One popular theory is that the handshake originated as a way for medieval knights\, Roman soldiers\, or earlier weapon-carrying men to check the other person’s forearm for hidden daggers\, with the up-and-down shake intended to dislodge any concealed weapon. \nNational Handshake Day\, the awareness day itself\, is much more recent. It was created in the mid-2000s by Miryam S. Roddy\, then working at BRODY Professional Development\, a US business communication training firm. Roddy felt that the gesture deserved its own day at a time when business etiquette was being reshaped by mobile phones\, casual workplaces\, and shifting cultural norms. She chose the last Thursday in June as a date that fell at a quieter point in the calendar. \nThe day has been observed by Stadium Solutions\, etiquette schools\, and chambers of commerce\, and gained an unexpected boost in profile during and after the COVID-19 pandemic\, when greeting practices were forced into a global rethink. \nFun Facts About National Handshake Day\n\nThe earliest known depiction of a handshake is on a ninth-century-BCE Assyrian relief showing King Shalmaneser III clasping hands with Babylonian king Marduk-zakir-shumi I.\nNational Handshake Day was founded in the mid-2000s by Miryam S. Roddy of BRODY Professional Development.\nThe Guinness World Record for the longest continuous handshake is over 43 hours\, set in 2011.\nGrip strength\, as measured in a handshake\, is widely used in medical research as a predictor of longevity and overall health.\nThe COVID-19 pandemic temporarily replaced the handshake with the elbow bump\, the fist bump\, and the foot tap in many workplaces and public events.\nThe 1990 handshake between Nelson Mandela and South African President F. W. de Klerk is widely considered one of the most consequential greetings in modern history.\n\nWhy National Handshake Day Matters\nThe handshake is small\, but it carries surprising weight. Studies in social psychology have shown that a confident handshake measurably improves first impressions in interviews and negotiations. In an era of remote work and digital communication\, the day is a small reminder that physical\, in-person greeting still matters when it is appropriate to use. \nFrequently Asked Questions\nWhat is National Handshake Day?\nNational Handshake Day is a US observance celebrating the handshake as a greeting and a piece of business etiquette. It is held annually on the last Thursday of June. \nWhen is National Handshake Day in 2026?\nNational Handshake Day 2026 falls on Thursday 25 June 2026. \nWho created National Handshake Day?\nThe day was created in the mid-2000s by Miryam S. Roddy\, then a corporate communications professional at BRODY Professional Development\, who wanted to recognise the value of a strong handshake in business and personal interactions. \nSpread the Word\nJoin the celebration and share your favourite handshakes on social media with #NationalHandshakeDay and #HandshakeDay2026. Tag the colleague who taught you the importance of a strong greeting. \nRelated Awareness Days\n\nNational Good Neighbor Day – Another US observance celebrating everyday human connection.\nWorld Kindness Day – The international day promoting acts of kindness\, including small social gestures.\nLet’s Hug Day – A complementary day celebrating physical greeting and warmth.\n\nLinks\n\nVisit the National Day Calendar’s Handshake Day page\nExplore more awareness days at AwarenessDays.com
URL:https://www.awarenessdays.com/awareness-days-calendar/national-handshake-day/
LOCATION:United States\, United States
CATEGORIES:Fun & Quirky Awareness Days,June Awareness Days,United States
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.awarenessdays.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/04/istock-2253241515.jpg
GEO:37.09024;-95.712891
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260626
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20260627
DTSTAMP:20260520T205834
CREATED:20260505T135747Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260505T135747Z
UID:10021642-1782432000-1782518399@www.awarenessdays.com
SUMMARY:Bring Your Dog to Work Day
DESCRIPTION:Bring Your Dog to Work Day takes place on Friday 26 June 2026. The annual UK fundraising event invites dog-friendly workplaces to open their doors to four-legged colleagues for a day\, with participating businesses donating to animal welfare charities. Now in its second decade\, the day combines office fun with a serious cause: improving the lives of dogs in shelters\, sanctuaries\, and rescue centres. \nHow to Celebrate Bring Your Dog to Work Day\nWhether you are an employer\, a dog owner\, or simply someone who likes a wagging tail under the desk\, there is a way to take part: \n\nGet permission first – Speak to your manager and HR team about taking part. Make sure colleagues with allergies or anxieties are comfortable\, and check the building’s policy on animals.\nMake a donation – The day is fundamentally a fundraiser. Encourage participants to give a fixed donation to take part\, with proceeds going to All Dogs Matter\, Animals Asia\, or another official charity partner.\nRun a doggy bake sale – Sell biscuits\, cupcakes\, and dog-friendly treats. The proceeds add to the day’s total fundraising and bring colleagues together.\nHold a “best in office” competition – Categories such as waggiest tail\, best outfit\, or most photogenic colleague encourage gentle competition and make for great social content.\nSet up a dog-friendly zone – Designate areas of the office where dogs are welcome and others where they are not\, ensuring colleagues who would prefer a quiet space have one.\nPlan a lunchtime walk – Organise a group walk to a nearby park. It gets the team moving and gives the dogs a break from the unfamiliar environment.\nProvide water bowls and treats – Stock the kitchen with bowls\, blankets\, and a small supply of treats so visiting dogs are comfortable throughout the day.\nShare photos with the right hashtags – Use #BringYourDogToWorkDay and #BYDTWD on LinkedIn\, Instagram\, and X to amplify the campaign and link back to the chosen charity.\n\nWhat is Bring Your Dog to Work Day?\nBring Your Dog to Work Day is a UK fundraising day organised by HOWND\, an ethical pet care brand\, to raise money for animal welfare charities. Workplaces sign up\, employees bring well-behaved dogs into the office for the day\, and the business or its staff make a donation to support the cause. It is now widely observed across the UK\, with thousands of companies taking part each year. \nWhen is Bring Your Dog to Work Day?\nBring Your Dog to Work Day 2026 falls on Friday 26 June 2026. The day is held annually on the last Friday of June. It is distinct from the American “Take Your Dog to Work Day”\, which is run by Pet Sitters International and falls on the same Friday in 2026. \nThe History of Bring Your Dog to Work Day\nThe UK Bring Your Dog to Work Day was launched in 2014 by HOWND\, a Cardiff-based ethical pet care company. The team had attended the established American “Take Your Dog to Work Day” and felt the UK needed its own version\, with proceeds dedicated to British and international animal welfare charities. The first event was a modest affair\, with a few dozen offices signing up\, but support grew quickly through word of mouth and social media. \nWithin five years\, thousands of UK businesses were taking part annually\, with charity partners including All Dogs Matter\, Animals Asia\, and Surge Sanctuary receiving meaningful donations from the campaign. The event has been backed by celebrities\, journalists\, and dog-loving professionals across sectors from law firms to advertising agencies. HOWND continues to coordinate the day\, providing free posters\, social media graphics\, and fundraising guidance for participating businesses. \nFun Facts About Bring Your Dog to Work Day\n\nBring Your Dog to Work Day was founded in 2014 by Cardiff-based ethical pet care brand HOWND.\nIt is held annually on the last Friday of June\, deliberately positioned at the start of the summer when offices are at their most relaxed.\nThe day raises money for animal welfare charities including All Dogs Matter\, Animals Asia\, and Surge Sanctuary.\nAccording to the charity Mind\, simply petting a dog for a few minutes can reduce levels of the stress hormone cortisol and increase oxytocin\, making office dogs a small but real wellbeing boost.\nA 2017 study by Banfield Pet Hospital found that 67 percent of pet-friendly workplaces reported higher employee morale\, and 50 percent reported better staff retention.\n\nWhy Bring Your Dog to Work Day Matters\nBeyond the photos of golden retrievers in meeting rooms\, the day raises significant funds for animal welfare charities and helps build the case for pet-friendly workplaces. Companies that take part often see lasting improvements in team culture\, with informal connections forming around shared dog ownership. For shelter dogs and animals in international sanctuaries\, the donations raised translate directly into food\, veterinary care\, and rehoming work. \nFrequently Asked Questions\nWhat is Bring Your Dog to Work Day?\nIt is a UK fundraising event founded in 2014 by HOWND\, on which workplaces invite dogs into the office for the day in exchange for donations to animal welfare charities. \nWhen is Bring Your Dog to Work Day in 2026?\nBring Your Dog to Work Day 2026 falls on Friday 26 June 2026\, the last Friday of June. \nIs Bring Your Dog to Work Day the same as Take Your Dog to Work Day?\nNo. The UK Bring Your Dog to Work Day was launched by HOWND in 2014\, while the American Take Your Dog to Work Day was launched by Pet Sitters International in 1999. Both fall on the same Friday in late June and share a similar spirit\, but they are run by different organisations. \nSpread the Word\nJoin the celebration and share your office dog photos on social media with #BringYourDogToWorkDay and #BYDTWD2026. Tag your colleagues and challenge friends in other offices to take part too. \nRelated Awareness Days\n\nNational Corgi Day – A celebration of one of the UK’s most beloved breeds.\nNational Dachshund Day – A fellow June dog day\, dedicated to the dachshund breed.\nNational Dog Day – The annual August day celebrating dogs of all breeds.\n\nLinks\n\nVisit the official Bring Your Dog to Work Day website\nExplore more awareness days at AwarenessDays.com
URL:https://www.awarenessdays.com/awareness-days-calendar/bring-your-dog-to-work-day/
LOCATION:United Kingdom\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:Animals & Wildlife Awareness,June Awareness Days,United Kingdom
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.awarenessdays.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/istock-1483695322.jpg
GEO:55.378051;-3.435973
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260626
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20260627
DTSTAMP:20260520T205834
CREATED:20260505T141238Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260505T141238Z
UID:10021690-1782432000-1782518399@www.awarenessdays.com
SUMMARY:Supporting Small Businesses Abroad Day
DESCRIPTION:Supporting Small Businesses Abroad Day takes place on Friday\, 26 June 2026. The day encourages travellers\, expats\, and global consumers to use their time and money to back independent businesses outside their home country. From a family-run café in Lisbon to a textile cooperative in Oaxaca\, small businesses around the world depend on visitors and online shoppers to keep their doors open. The day sits one day before the United Nations Micro\, Small and Medium-sized Enterprises Day on 27 June\, which celebrates the contribution of small businesses to global prosperity. \nWhat is Supporting Small Businesses Abroad Day?\nSupporting Small Businesses Abroad Day is an awareness day focused on independent businesses operating outside the consumer’s home country. It encourages travellers and overseas shoppers to choose locally owned cafés\, hotels\, shops\, restaurants\, and tour operators rather than international chains. The day also recognises expats and overseas remote workers who become loyal customers of small businesses in their adopted countries. \nWhen is Supporting Small Businesses Abroad Day?\nSupporting Small Businesses Abroad Day takes place on Friday\, 26 June 2026. The date is fixed each year and sits the day before the UN’s Micro\, Small and Medium-sized Enterprises Day on 27 June\, allowing the two observances to amplify each other. \nWhy Supporting Small Businesses Abroad Day Matters\nSmall and medium-sized enterprises account for around 90% of all businesses worldwide and roughly 70% of jobs\, according to the United Nations. In many developing economies\, small businesses are the backbone of community life and a vital route out of poverty. Tourism and global e-commerce can either lift these businesses up or squeeze them out as international chains and platforms expand. By choosing to support local independents when abroad\, consumers help money stay in the communities they visit\, sustain traditional crafts and recipes\, and preserve the unique character of places. The day reminds us that everyday spending decisions have real consequences for the people on the other end of the transaction. \nHow to Get Involved in Supporting Small Businesses Abroad Day\nWhether you are travelling\, working remotely\, or shopping online\, here are practical ways to take part: \n\nChoose locally owned accommodation – Pick a family-run guesthouse\, B&B\, or boutique hotel rather than a chain. Sites like Sawday’s\, Slow Cabins\, and small business directories help you find independents.\nEat where the locals eat – Skip the tourist strip and find restaurants frequented by residents. Independent cafés and small restaurants channel money directly into the local economy.\nBuy crafts directly from makers – Whether it is pottery in Greece\, leatherwork in Morocco\, or weaving in Peru\, buying from artisans cuts out middlemen and supports traditional skills.\nBook independent tours – Choose locally guided experiences over international tour operators. Many cities have free walking tours run by residents who rely on tips.\nShop on platforms that support overseas independents – Etsy\, Novica\, and various fair trade marketplaces let you buy from small businesses around the world from home.\nLeave thoughtful reviews – A glowing Google or TripAdvisor review of a small business has lasting value. Take five minutes after a great experience to write one.\nTip generously – In many countries\, tipping makes a real difference to staff at small businesses. Be aware of local norms and tip appropriately.\n\nHistory of Supporting Small Businesses Abroad Day\nSupporting Small Businesses Abroad Day is a relatively recent observance that emerged in the 2020s alongside a wave of consumer awareness about ethical travel and global supply chains. It builds on the long history of campaigns to support small businesses domestically\, including Small Business Saturday (US\, 2010)\, Small Business Saturday UK (2013)\, and various national initiatives. The day extends the same philosophy beyond national borders. \nThe day’s emergence also coincided with the United Nations adoption of Micro\, Small and Medium-sized Enterprises Day on 27 June 2017. Recognising the international focus of the UN day\, supporters of small businesses abroad created a complementary observance to highlight the consumer side of the equation. The two days together cover both the recognition of small businesses by governments and institutions\, and the everyday choices of individual consumers and travellers. \nWhile Supporting Small Businesses Abroad Day does not yet have a single global organising body\, it has been embraced by travel writers\, ethical travel platforms\, expat communities\, and small business advocates as a useful prompt to think about where money goes when we travel or shop online. \nNoteworthy Facts About Supporting Small Businesses Abroad Day\n\nThe day takes place on 26 June\, one day before the UN’s Micro\, Small and Medium-sized Enterprises Day on 27 June.\nSmall and medium-sized enterprises account for around 90% of all businesses worldwide.\nIn developing economies\, small businesses are responsible for up to 70% of formal employment.\nIndependent local businesses typically retain a much larger share of consumer spending in their community than international chains.\nSmall Business Saturday\, the original consumer-focused small business day\, was launched in the United States in 2010 by American Express.\n\nFrequently Asked Questions\nWhat is Supporting Small Businesses Abroad Day?\nIt is an awareness day on 26 June that encourages travellers and overseas shoppers to support locally owned small businesses outside their home country. \nWhen is Supporting Small Businesses Abroad Day in 2026?\nIt takes place on Friday\, 26 June 2026. \nHow is it different from Small Business Saturday?\nSmall Business Saturday is a consumer-focused day to support local small businesses in your own country. Supporting Small Businesses Abroad Day extends that idea to small businesses around the world\, especially those that depend on travellers and overseas customers. \nSpread the Word\nHelp raise awareness by sharing Supporting Small Businesses Abroad Day with your friends\, family\, and followers. Use the hashtags #SmallBusinessAbroad and #SupportSmallGlobally on social media. Every small business championed online helps another shopper or traveller find them. \nRelated Awareness Days\n\nThe Thoughtful Traveller Day – A day for considered\, sustainable travel that aligns with supporting overseas independents.\nBlack Friday – The other side of the consumer calendar\, often dominated by large retailers and worth balancing with small business support.\nBuy Nothing Day – A complementary observance challenging unnecessary spending and encouraging mindful consumption.\n\nLinks\n\nRead about UN MSME Day on 27 June\nExplore more awareness days at AwarenessDays.com
URL:https://www.awarenessdays.com/awareness-days-calendar/supporting-small-businesses-abroad-day/
LOCATION:International
CATEGORIES:Business & Finance Awareness,International,June Awareness Days
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.awarenessdays.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/istock-1018908040.jpg
GEO:37.09024;-95.712891
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260626
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20260627
DTSTAMP:20260520T205834
CREATED:20260505T141254Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260505T150655Z
UID:10021691-1782432000-1782518399@www.awarenessdays.com
SUMMARY:International Day Against Drug Abuse and Illicit Trafficking
DESCRIPTION:The International Day Against Drug Abuse and Illicit Trafficking\, also known as World Drug Day\, takes place on Friday 26 June 2026. The United Nations observance is led by the UN Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) and is dedicated to strengthening action and cooperation toward a world free of drug abuse\, with a focus on health\, human rights\, and evidence-based responses to the global drug problem. \nWhat is the International Day Against Drug Abuse and Illicit Trafficking?\nWorld Drug Day is a United Nations observance designated by the General Assembly to highlight the global challenges of substance use\, drug trafficking\, and the harm caused to individuals\, families\, and communities. It is led by UNODC\, supported by national health ministries\, charities such as Release and Adfam in the UK\, and treatment and harm reduction organisations worldwide. Each year UNODC sets a campaign theme that frames public communications and policy advocacy. \nWhen is the International Day Against Drug Abuse and Illicit Trafficking?\nWorld Drug Day 2026 falls on Friday 26 June 2026. The date is fixed annually as 26 June\, marking the original 1987 UN General Assembly resolution that established the observance. \nWhy World Drug Day Matters\nDrug use and the illicit trade behind it cause significant human and social harm. The UNODC’s most recent World Drug Report estimated that around 292 million people used drugs globally in the previous year\, with around 64 million suffering from drug use disorders. Only a fraction of those who could benefit from treatment receive it. Drug overdose remains a leading cause of preventable death in many high-income countries\, including the United States\, Canada\, and the United Kingdom\, while production and trafficking fuel violence and corruption in producer and transit countries. The day exists to focus political attention on these issues\, share what works\, and centre the human rights of people who use drugs. \nHow to Get Involved in World Drug Day\nThe day is observed by governments\, charities\, schools\, and individuals. Try one or several of the following: \n\nRead the UNODC World Drug Report – Published in late June each year\, the report is the leading global source of drug data. Download it free from the UNODC website.\nShare trusted information – Use social media to share resources from UNODC\, the WHO\, FRANK\, Release\, and other evidence-based services rather than sensational coverage.\nSupport a treatment charity – Charities such as Release\, Adfam\, and We Are With You provide free\, confidential advice and support for people affected by substance use and their families.\nLearn about harm reduction – Harm reduction approaches\, including needle exchange\, naloxone\, and drug checking\, save lives. Use the day to learn about services in your area.\nVolunteer or donate – Many local treatment and recovery organisations rely on volunteers and donations. Look up groups in your area and ask how to help.\nTalk to young people – Honest\, non-judgemental conversations about drugs and alcohol with teenagers are far more effective than scare tactics. Resources from FRANK in the UK and DrugFreeKids.org in the US can help.\nCarry naloxone if appropriate – In many countries\, including the UK and US\, naloxone is now widely available to anyone who may witness an opioid overdose. Training takes minutes and can save a life.\nEngage with policy – Drug policy is contested. The day is a good moment to read about different approaches\, including decriminalisation models in Portugal and Switzerland\, and to engage with your representatives.\n\nHistory of the International Day Against Drug Abuse and Illicit Trafficking\nThe day was established by United Nations General Assembly Resolution 42/112 on 7 December 1987\, following the 1987 International Conference on Drug Abuse and Illicit Trafficking in Vienna. The conference brought together more than 100 governments and produced the Comprehensive Multidisciplinary Outline (CMO) of future activities in drug control. The resolution chose 26 June to coincide with the anniversary of the dismantling of the Humen opium trade in 1839\, symbolising international resolve against trafficking. \nUNODC\, headquartered in Vienna\, has led the observance ever since. Each year UNODC selects a theme and produces global campaign materials. Recent themes have included “Better knowledge for better care”\, “People First: stop stigma and discrimination\, strengthen prevention”\, and “The evidence is clear: invest in prevention”. \nThe day has evolved alongside the global drug debate\, moving from a strongly enforcement-focused message in its early years toward a more balanced public health approach that places treatment\, prevention\, harm reduction\, and human rights alongside efforts against trafficking and organised crime. \nNoteworthy Facts About World Drug Day\n\nThe day was established by UN General Assembly Resolution 42/112 on 7 December 1987 and first observed in 1988.\nThe date of 26 June was chosen to commemorate the dismantling of the Humen opium trade in 1839.\nUNODC’s most recent World Drug Report estimates around 292 million people used drugs in the past year\, with 64 million suffering from drug use disorders.\nOnly around 1 in 11 people with drug use disorders globally receives treatment\, with significant gaps in low- and middle-income countries.\nNaloxone\, an emergency medication that reverses opioid overdose\, is now widely available without prescription in the UK\, US\, and Canada.\n\nFrequently Asked Questions\nWhat is the International Day Against Drug Abuse and Illicit Trafficking?\nIt is a United Nations observance\, also known as World Drug Day\, held annually on 26 June. It is led by the UN Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) and aims to strengthen global action against drug abuse and trafficking. \nWhen is World Drug Day in 2026?\nWorld Drug Day 2026 falls on Friday 26 June 2026. \nWhy is World Drug Day on 26 June?\nThe date marks the dismantling of the Humen opium trade in 1839 and was selected by the UN General Assembly as a symbol of international determination against drug trafficking. \nSpread the Word\nHelp raise awareness by sharing World Drug Day with your friends\, family\, and followers. Use the hashtags #WorldDrugDay and #CareInCrises on social media. The more people who understand drug use as a health issue\, the better the response we build. \nRelated Awareness Days\n\nPTSD Awareness Day – The 27 June US observance on post-traumatic stress disorder\, often a co-occurring condition with substance use.\nWorld Wellbeing Week – The wider June wellbeing week including mental health and addiction support themes.\nWorld Meditation Day – A complementary observance focused on mental health tools that support recovery.\n\nLinks\n\nVisit the UN’s World Drug Day page\nExplore more awareness days at AwarenessDays.com
URL:https://www.awarenessdays.com/awareness-days-calendar/international-day-against-drug-abuse-and-illicit-trafficking/
LOCATION:International
CATEGORIES:Health & Wellbeing Awareness,International,June Awareness Days
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.awarenessdays.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/11/iStock-177521729-1-1.jpg
GEO:37.09024;-95.712891
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260627
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20260628
DTSTAMP:20260520T205834
CREATED:20260505T135210Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260505T135210Z
UID:10021620-1782518400-1782604799@www.awarenessdays.com
SUMMARY:Helen Keller Day
DESCRIPTION:Helen Keller Day is observed annually on 27 June to commemorate the birth of Helen Adams Keller\, the American author\, activist\, and lecturer who became the first deafblind person to earn a bachelor of arts degree. The day honours her remarkable life and the wider community of people with sensory disabilities whose lives she championed. \nWhat is Helen Keller Day?\nHelen Keller Day celebrates the legacy of one of the twentieth century’s most influential disability rights advocates. Born in Tuscumbia\, Alabama\, in 1880\, Keller lost her sight and hearing at nineteen months old after a serious illness believed to have been bacterial meningitis. Her partnership with teacher Anne Sullivan transformed her life and produced one of the most enduring stories of education\, perseverance\, and advocacy in American history. The day recognises her achievements as an author\, suffragist\, and campaigner for the blind and deaf\, and reflects on the progress made in disability rights since her death in 1968. \nWhen is Helen Keller Day?\nHelen Keller Day takes place on Saturday\, 27 June 2026. It falls on the same date every year\, marking Keller’s birthday on 27 June 1880. The day was formally proclaimed by President Jimmy Carter in 1980\, the centenary of her birth\, and has been observed annually in the United States ever since. While not a federal holiday\, it is widely recognised by schools\, libraries\, museums\, and disability organisations across the country. \nWhy Helen Keller Day Matters\nHelen Keller proved that profound disability is no barrier to a life of intellectual\, political\, and social influence. She wrote more than a dozen books\, lectured in over twenty-five countries\, met every American president from Grover Cleveland to Lyndon B. Johnson\, and helped found the American Civil Liberties Union in 1920. According to the World Health Organization\, an estimated 2.2 billion people worldwide have a near or distance vision impairment\, and approximately 466 million have disabling hearing loss. Helen Keller Day refocuses public attention on accessibility\, inclusion\, and the rights of disabled people\, while celebrating the educators\, interpreters\, and family members who help make full participation possible. \nHow to Get Involved in Helen Keller Day\nThere are many meaningful ways to take part in Helen Keller Day\, whether you are an educator\, family member\, or simply someone who admires her story. \n\nRead one of her books – Start with her autobiography The Story of My Life\, published in 1903 when she was just 22\, or her later work The World I Live In\, which describes her sensory experience of the world.\nVisit the Helen Keller Birthplace – Ivy Green in Tuscumbia\, Alabama\, is preserved as a museum and hosts an annual festival around her birthday with performances of The Miracle Worker.\nDonate to Helen Keller International – The charity she co-founded in 1915 still works to combat blindness and malnutrition in more than twenty countries.\nLearn the manual alphabet – Try the finger-spelling system Anne Sullivan first taught Helen with the word “water” at the family pump in 1887.\nWatch The Miracle Worker – The 1962 film\, based on William Gibson’s play\, won Anne Bancroft and Patty Duke Academy Awards for their portrayals of Sullivan and Keller.\nSupport deafblind charities locally – Organisations such as the American Association of the Deaf-Blind\, Sense in the UK\, and similar groups elsewhere offer volunteering\, fundraising\, and awareness opportunities.\nAudit your workplace or school for accessibility – Use the day as a prompt to review screen reader compatibility\, captioning\, signage\, and physical accessibility.\nShare her quotes – Lines such as “Alone we can do so little; together we can do so much” remain widely shared on social media and capture the spirit of the day.\n\nHistory of Helen Keller Day\nThe campaign to formally recognise Helen Keller’s birthday gathered momentum in the late 1970s as the centenary of her birth approached. On 19 June 1980\, President Jimmy Carter signed Presidential Proclamation 4767\, designating 27 June 1980 as Helen Keller Day. The proclamation paid tribute to Keller’s “courage\, determination\, and dedication to humanity” and called on Americans to observe the day with appropriate ceremonies and activities. \nThe proclamation drew on years of advocacy by the American Foundation for the Blind\, where Keller worked from 1924 until shortly before her death in 1968\, and by the American Foundation for Overseas Blind\, now Helen Keller International. Both organisations had long held events around her birthday\, and the federal recognition gave their work greater public visibility. \nSince 1980\, Helen Keller Day has been observed in different ways across the United States and beyond. Several states have adopted their own proclamations\, and Pennsylvania has a longer tradition of recognising her on the same date. Schools use the day to teach pupils about disability history\, and museums dedicated to disability rights\, such as the one at Ivy Green and the Perkins School for the Blind in Massachusetts\, hold lectures\, exhibitions\, and accessible tours. \nNoteworthy Facts About Helen Keller Day\n\nHelen Keller graduated cum laude from Radcliffe College in 1904\, becoming the first deafblind person to earn a bachelor of arts degree.\nShe was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom by President Lyndon B. Johnson in 1964\, four years before her death.\nKeller’s likeness appears on the reverse of the Alabama state quarter\, issued by the United States Mint in 2003.\nShe co-founded the American Civil Liberties Union in 1920 alongside Roger Baldwin and others\, and was an outspoken socialist and women’s suffrage advocate.\nThe Anne Sullivan Macy moment at the water pump in Tuscumbia\, when Keller first connected the word “water” to the substance\, took place on 5 April 1887\, when Helen was six years old.\n\nFrequently Asked Questions\nWhat is Helen Keller Day?\nHelen Keller Day is an annual commemoration on 27 June marking the birth of Helen Keller\, an American author and disability rights advocate\, and celebrating her contributions to education\, civil liberties\, and the rights of deaf and blind people. \nWhen is Helen Keller Day in 2026?\nHelen Keller Day falls on Saturday\, 27 June 2026. It is observed on the same date every year. \nWho proclaimed Helen Keller Day?\nPresident Jimmy Carter formally designated Helen Keller Day on 19 June 1980 by Presidential Proclamation 4767\, marking the centenary of her birth. Several states had already been observing the date informally for years. \nSpread the Word\nHelp raise awareness by sharing Helen Keller Day with your friends\, family\, and followers. Use the hashtags #HelenKellerDay and #HelenKellerDay2026 on social media. The more people who learn about her story and the ongoing work for disability rights\, the bigger the impact. \nRelated Awareness Days\n\nWorld Mental Health Day – A global observance championing wellbeing and challenging stigma in ways Keller herself fought for.\nInternational Day of Innocent Children Victims of Aggression – Connects to Keller’s lifelong campaigning for children’s welfare and human rights.\nUniversal Children’s Day – Echoes Keller’s commitment to education and the rights of disabled children worldwide.\n\nLinks\n\nVisit Helen Keller International\, the charity she co-founded\nExplore more awareness days at AwarenessDays.com
URL:https://www.awarenessdays.com/awareness-days-calendar/helen-keller-day/
LOCATION:United States\, United States
CATEGORIES:Community & Inclusion Awareness,June Awareness Days,United States
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.awarenessdays.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/istock-2266131551.jpg
GEO:37.09024;-95.712891
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260627
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20260628
DTSTAMP:20260520T205834
CREATED:20260505T135309Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260505T135309Z
UID:10021623-1782518400-1782604799@www.awarenessdays.com
SUMMARY:PTSD Awareness Day
DESCRIPTION:National PTSD Awareness Day is observed every year on 27 June. The day\, which falls in the wider National PTSD Awareness Month\, is dedicated to raising public understanding of post-traumatic stress disorder\, reducing the stigma that prevents people from seeking help\, and pointing those affected toward effective treatment. \nWhat is PTSD Awareness Day?\nNational PTSD Awareness Day is a US national observance held each year on 27 June. It was created to acknowledge that post-traumatic stress disorder affects millions of Americans\, including veterans\, first responders\, survivors of assault and accidents\, and anyone who has experienced or witnessed a traumatic event. The day is led in the United States by the National Center for PTSD\, part of the Department of Veterans Affairs\, and supported by mental health charities\, veterans’ organisations\, and clinicians worldwide. \nWhen is PTSD Awareness Day?\nPTSD Awareness Day takes place on Saturday 27 June 2026. The date is fixed in honour of Army Staff Sergeant Joe Biel\, whose birthday fell on 27 June and whose family advocated for the original Senate resolution. The day sits within National PTSD Awareness Month\, which spans the whole of June. \nWhy PTSD Awareness Day Matters\nPost-traumatic stress disorder is more common than many people realise. According to the National Center for PTSD\, around 6 out of every 100 adults in the United States will experience PTSD at some point in their lives\, equating to roughly 13 million Americans in any given year. Among veterans the figure is higher\, at about 7 percent lifetime prevalence\, rising to as much as 29 percent for those who served in Operations Iraqi Freedom and Enduring Freedom. Female veterans are more than twice as likely as male veterans to be diagnosed. Despite effective treatments being available\, many people delay seeking help because of stigma or a lack of awareness\, which is why a dedicated day matters. \nHow to Get Involved in PTSD Awareness Day\nThere are practical ways for individuals\, employers\, and communities to take part: \n\nLearn the symptoms – Familiarise yourself with the four main symptom clusters: intrusive memories\, avoidance\, negative changes in thinking and mood\, and changes in arousal or reactivity. Knowing the signs helps you recognise them in yourself or others.\nWear teal – Teal is the colour associated with PTSD awareness. Wearing a teal ribbon or item of clothing on 27 June is a simple way to signal solidarity.\nShare trusted resources – Use social media to share links to evidence-based information from the National Center for PTSD\, the Veterans Crisis Line\, or your country’s equivalent.\nDonate to a relevant charity – Organisations such as Wounded Warrior Project\, Give an Hour\, and PTSD UK rely on donations to fund treatment\, research\, and peer support.\nCheck in on a veteran or first responder – A simple message asking how someone is really doing can be the moment they decide to seek help. Listen without judgement.\nEncourage workplace training – Ask your employer to invest in trauma-informed training for managers\, particularly in sectors with high exposure such as healthcare\, emergency services\, and journalism.\nSpeak openly about your own experience – If you live with PTSD and feel safe doing so\, sharing your story helps others understand that recovery is possible.\nSupport research – Organisations like the Cohen Veterans Bioscience network fund research into the biology of trauma and new treatments. Even small donations contribute to long-term progress.\n\nHistory of PTSD Awareness Day\nNational PTSD Awareness Day has its roots in the story of one soldier and his family. Army Staff Sergeant Joe Biel of the North Dakota National Guard returned home in 2007 after his second tour in the Iraq War. He was struggling with the symptoms of PTSD and took his life in April of that year. His family and colleagues began campaigning for greater awareness\, and Senator Kent Conrad of North Dakota took up the cause. \nIn 2010 the United States Senate passed Senate Resolution 541\, designating 27 June\, Joe Biel’s birthday\, as National PTSD Awareness Day. The resolution drew attention to the experiences of returning service members and the importance of removing the stigma attached to seeking treatment. In 2014 the Senate expanded the observance\, declaring the entire month of June as National PTSD Awareness Month. New resolutions have been passed each year since to renew the designation. \nWhile the day was created with veterans in mind\, awareness has broadened to include the many civilians affected by PTSD\, including survivors of sexual assault\, road traffic collisions\, natural disasters\, childhood abuse\, and the trauma faced by emergency responders and frontline healthcare staff. \nNoteworthy Facts About PTSD Awareness Day\n\nNational PTSD Awareness Day was first designated in 2010 by US Senate Resolution 541\, championed by Senator Kent Conrad.\nThe date of 27 June was chosen to honour Army Staff Sergeant Joe Biel\, whose family campaigned for the resolution after his death.\nAbout 6 percent of US adults will experience PTSD at some point in their lives\, equating to roughly 13 million Americans in any given year.\nWomen are about twice as likely as men to develop PTSD over their lifetime\, with hormonal\, social\, and exposure-related factors all contributing.\nEffective evidence-based treatments include trauma-focused cognitive behavioural therapy\, eye movement desensitisation and reprocessing (EMDR)\, and prolonged exposure therapy.\n\nFrequently Asked Questions\nWhat is PTSD Awareness Day?\nPTSD Awareness Day is a US national observance\, held annually on 27 June\, dedicated to raising understanding of post-traumatic stress disorder and reducing stigma around seeking help. \nWhen is PTSD Awareness Day in 2026?\nPTSD Awareness Day 2026 falls on Saturday 27 June 2026. \nWhy is PTSD Awareness Day on 27 June?\nThe date marks the birthday of Army Staff Sergeant Joe Biel of the North Dakota National Guard\, whose family campaigned for the original Senate resolution after he died by suicide in 2007 while suffering from PTSD. \nSpread the Word\nHelp raise awareness by sharing PTSD Awareness Day with your friends\, family\, and followers. Use the hashtags #PTSDAwarenessDay and #PTSDAwarenessDay2026 on social media. The more people who understand PTSD\, the easier it becomes for those affected to ask for help. \nRelated Awareness Days\n\nResilience Week – A complementary week focused on building emotional and community resilience.\nWorld Meditation Day – A day promoting meditation as a tool for mental health and recovery.\nNational Nurses Week – Honours frontline nurses\, many of whom face elevated trauma risk in their work.\n\nLinks\n\nVisit the National Center for PTSD\nExplore more awareness days at AwarenessDays.com
URL:https://www.awarenessdays.com/awareness-days-calendar/ptsd-awareness-day/
LOCATION:United States\, United States
CATEGORIES:Health & Wellbeing Awareness,June Awareness Days,United States
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.awarenessdays.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/istock-1386401250.jpg
GEO:37.09024;-95.712891
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260627
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20260628
DTSTAMP:20260520T205834
CREATED:20260505T135525Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260505T135525Z
UID:10021632-1782518400-1782604799@www.awarenessdays.com
SUMMARY:International Sunglasses Day
DESCRIPTION:International Sunglasses Day takes place on Saturday 27 June 2026. The day is part fashion celebration\, part eye-health campaign\, and is used by opticians\, charities\, and brands to remind us that sunglasses are not just an accessory but a piece of essential protective equipment for our eyes. \nHow to Celebrate International Sunglasses Day\nThis is an easy day to take part in. Try one or several of the following: \n\nCheck the UV rating on your shades – Look for sunglasses labelled UV400 or 100 percent UV protection. If your current pair offers neither\, treat the day as the prompt you need to upgrade.\nBook an eye test – Use the day to book your annual eye examination. An optician can spot early signs of damage caused by UV exposure long before you notice anything yourself.\nUpdate your social media – Post a sunglasses selfie using #NationalSunglassesDay or #SunglassesDay. The Vision Council\, which created the day\, runs a campaign each year that anyone can join.\nShop a small label – Independent eyewear brands often produce higher quality lenses than fast-fashion alternatives. Use the day to discover a maker you have not heard of.\nDonate old sunglasses – Charities such as Lions Clubs International collect used eyewear and redistribute it to people in low-income countries who need vision correction or sun protection.\nPack sunglasses for children – Children’s eyes are more vulnerable to UV than adults’ because their lenses are clearer. Buy a properly rated pair and make wearing them a normal part of going outside.\nStyle a vintage frame – Charity shops and vintage boutiques are full of classic frames. Have the lenses replaced with modern UV-rated ones to combine character with protection.\nTake part in a giveaway – Many opticians and brands run social media contests on the day. It is a low-cost way to refresh your collection.\n\nWhat is International Sunglasses Day?\nInternational Sunglasses Day\, also widely known as National Sunglasses Day in the United States\, is an annual awareness day dedicated to the protective and stylistic role of sunglasses. The day is used to highlight the importance of UV protection\, reduce the long-term risk of cataracts\, macular degeneration\, and ocular melanoma\, and celebrate sunglasses as a fashion staple. \nWhen is International Sunglasses Day?\nInternational Sunglasses Day falls on 27 June every year. In 2026 the day is observed on Saturday 27 June 2026. \nThe History of International Sunglasses Day\nThe history of sunglasses themselves stretches back centuries. As early as 14th-century China\, judges wore tinted lenses made from smoky quartz\, not for sun protection but to hide the expression of their eyes during court proceedings. Inuit peoples carved slits into walrus ivory and bone to create snow goggles that protected against glare from sea ice. Mass-market modern sunglasses arrived in 1929\, when American entrepreneur Sam Foster began selling cheap moulded plastic frames on the boardwalk in Atlantic City. \nInternational Sunglasses Day\, the awareness day itself\, was created in 2009 by the Vision Council\, a US-based trade association representing the optical industry. The Vision Council chose 27 June because it falls just after the summer solstice\, when the days are longest and UV exposure is at its annual peak in the Northern Hemisphere. Each year the council promotes the day with educational content\, retailer campaigns\, and partnerships with eyewear brands. The campaign has grown beyond the United States and is now widely observed by retailers and influencers around the world. \nFun Facts About International Sunglasses Day\n\nInternational Sunglasses Day was launched by the Vision Council in 2009 to combine awareness of UV eye damage with a celebration of sunglasses style.\nThe earliest known sunglasses were used by Chinese judges in the 14th century to conceal their facial expressions in court.\nSam Foster sold the first commercially produced modern sunglasses on the Atlantic City boardwalk in 1929 under the Foster Grant brand.\nSunglasses were popularised in the 1930s when the US Army Air Corps commissioned Bausch and Lomb to design anti-glare aviator lenses for pilots.\nThe most expensive pair of sunglasses ever sold are reportedly the Chopard De Rigo Vision frames\, valued at around US$408\,000 thanks to their gold and diamond detailing.\nAround 27 percent of adults do not wear sunglasses regularly outdoors\, even though prolonged UV exposure increases the risk of cataracts and macular degeneration.\n\nWhy International Sunglasses Day Matters\nSunglasses are routinely treated as a fashion item\, but their primary job is to protect a delicate organ. The cornea\, lens\, and retina are all sensitive to ultraviolet radiation\, and damage accumulates over a lifetime. Wearing sunglasses with proper UV400 protection from a young age reduces the risk of cataracts\, photokeratitis\, and certain eye cancers. The day exists to make that link clear. \nFrequently Asked Questions\nWhat is International Sunglasses Day?\nInternational Sunglasses Day is an annual celebration of sunglasses as both a fashion accessory and a tool for protecting the eyes from UV damage. It is observed on 27 June each year. \nWhen is International Sunglasses Day in 2026?\nInternational Sunglasses Day 2026 falls on Saturday 27 June 2026. \nWhat should I look for when buying sunglasses?\nLook for lenses labelled UV400 or 100 percent UV protection. Polarised lenses reduce glare from reflective surfaces\, and a frame that fits comfortably and sits close to the face will block more stray light from the sides. \nSpread the Word\nJoin the celebration and share your best sunglasses photos on social media with #NationalSunglassesDay and #SunglassesDay2026. Tag a friend who never takes their shades off\, or one who really should start. \nRelated Awareness Days\n\nSun Awareness Week – A UK week run by the British Association of Dermatologists focused on safe time in the sun.\nUV Safety Awareness Month – A July observance covering all aspects of UV protection\, including eye health.\nNational Sunscreen Day – A complementary day promoting sun-safe skin habits.\n\nLinks\n\nVisit the Vision Council’s National Sunglasses Day page\nExplore more awareness days at AwarenessDays.com
URL:https://www.awarenessdays.com/awareness-days-calendar/international-sunglasses-day/
LOCATION:International
CATEGORIES:Fun & Quirky Awareness Days,International,June Awareness Days
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.awarenessdays.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/istock-1152865943.jpg
GEO:37.09024;-95.712891
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260627
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20260628
DTSTAMP:20260520T205834
CREATED:20260505T135959Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260505T135959Z
UID:10021651-1782518400-1782604799@www.awarenessdays.com
SUMMARY:National Bingo Day
DESCRIPTION:National Bingo Day takes place on Saturday 27 June 2026. The day celebrates one of the world’s most enduring social games\, with bingo halls\, charity groups\, and online platforms running special events for players old and new. From 1930s carnival origins in Atlanta to packed UK seaside resorts and modern online platforms\, bingo has remained a stubbornly popular part of community life. \nHow to Celebrate National Bingo Day\nYou do not need a hall full of regulars to mark the day. Try one or several of the following: \n\nVisit a bingo hall – Most clubs run special games on 27 June with bigger prize pots. It is also a chance to support a local venue and meet new people.\nHost a home bingo night – Print or buy bingo cards\, set up a caller\, and play with friends or family. Add prizes ranging from chocolates to gift vouchers to keep things lively.\nTry online bingo – The major online platforms run themed rooms on the day. Always set a budget before you play and stick to it.\nRun a charity game – Bingo is a popular fundraising format for schools\, care homes\, and local clubs. Donate the proceeds to a chosen cause.\nTeach kids bingo – Educational versions of bingo cover everything from times tables to Spanish vocabulary. The day is a chance to combine fun with learning.\nTry a themed bingo – Music bingo\, film bingo\, and emoji bingo are all popular variations. They are easy to organise and bring a fresh twist for younger players.\nVisit a residential home with games – Bingo is one of the most loved activities in care settings. A volunteer caller for the afternoon can be a real highlight for residents.\nShare memories online – Use #NationalBingoDay to post old photos\, family stories\, or your luckiest win. The day has a strong sense of nostalgia.\n\nWhat is National Bingo Day?\nNational Bingo Day is an annual celebration of bingo and the social communities that play it. It is observed in the United States on 27 June and has been adopted in the United Kingdom in recent years\, with a dedicated UK campaign launched in 2021. The day recognises bingo’s role as a hobby\, a charity fundraiser\, and a community ritual that crosses generations. \nWhen is National Bingo Day?\nNational Bingo Day 2026 falls on Saturday 27 June 2026. The date is fixed annually as 27 June. \nThe History of National Bingo Day\nThe origins of the awareness day itself are unclear: there is no agreed founder or year for the establishment of National Bingo Day in the United States\, though the date of 27 June has been observed by US bingo players\, publishers\, and gaming press since the early 2000s. In 2021 the UK launched its own dedicated National Bingo Day website and campaign\, with the support of major bingo operators\, to mark the contribution of the game to British social life. \nThe game itself has a much longer story. The earliest version is widely credited to a 16th-century Italian lottery called Il Giuoco del Lotto d’Italia\, which evolved into a French parlour game known as Le Lotto in the 18th century. The modern American game emerged in 1929\, when New York toymaker Edwin S. Lowe came across a version called “Beano” at a travelling carnival outside Atlanta\, Georgia. The story goes that a friend playing a test game with Lowe became so excited at winning that she accidentally shouted “Bingo!” instead of “Beano!”\, giving the game its modern name. \nLowe commercialised the game and worked with a Columbia University mathematician\, Carl Leffler\, to develop thousands of unique card combinations to make large halls workable. Bingo arrived in the UK in the 1960s\, where seaside towns and Mecca halls turned it into a national pastime\, and it has since become a cornerstone of community fundraising worldwide. \nFun Facts About National Bingo Day\n\nThe game is descended from a 16th-century Italian lottery called Il Giuoco del Lotto d’Italia\, first recorded around 1530.\nThe modern American name “Bingo” came from a 1929 mishap when a player accidentally shouted the wrong word at a carnival outside Atlanta.\nEdwin S. Lowe commissioned 6\,000 unique bingo card combinations from a Columbia University mathematician to support large hall games.\nThe Catholic Church became one of bingo’s biggest early backers\, using the game to raise funds for parish projects across the United States.\nThe UK’s largest bingo hall record was held at Mecca Bingo in Watford\, which once seated more than 2\,000 players for a single game.\nModern online bingo is a multi-billion-pound global industry\, but in-person halls and charity games still account for the majority of regular players.\n\nWhy National Bingo Day Matters\nBingo gets dismissed as a quiet hobby\, but its real value is social. For older adults in particular\, weekly bingo nights are an antidote to isolation\, while charity bingo raises significant funds for community causes every year. National Bingo Day is a chance to celebrate that role\, support local clubs that have been hit hard by closures\, and welcome a new generation of players. \nFrequently Asked Questions\nWhat is National Bingo Day?\nNational Bingo Day is an annual celebration of bingo as a social and cultural pastime\, held on 27 June each year in the United States and increasingly in the UK. \nWhen is National Bingo Day in 2026?\nNational Bingo Day 2026 falls on Saturday 27 June 2026. \nWhere did the name “Bingo” come from?\nThe name comes from a 1929 carnival outside Atlanta\, Georgia\, where a player at a game called “Beano” got excited and accidentally shouted “Bingo!” The toymaker Edwin S. Lowe\, who was watching\, adopted the name when he commercialised the game. \nSpread the Word\nJoin the celebration and share your bingo nights on social media with #NationalBingoDay and #NationalBingoDay2026. Tag your friends and challenge them to set up a game. \nRelated Awareness Days\n\nNational Baklava Day – Another quirky US food and culture day with strong community traditions.\nThe Big Lunch – The UK’s biggest annual community get-together\, fitting alongside Bingo Day’s social roots.\nWorld Kindness Day – Celebrates the small social acts that make communities stronger.\n\nLinks\n\nVisit the UK National Bingo Day website\nExplore more awareness days at AwarenessDays.com
URL:https://www.awarenessdays.com/awareness-days-calendar/national-bingo-day/
LOCATION:United States\, United States
CATEGORIES:Fun & Quirky Awareness Days,June Awareness Days,United States
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.awarenessdays.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/istock-2240727596.jpg
GEO:37.09024;-95.712891
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260627
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20260713
DTSTAMP:20260520T205834
CREATED:20260505T140336Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260505T140336Z
UID:10021666-1782518400-1783900799@www.awarenessdays.com
SUMMARY:Children's Art Week
DESCRIPTION:Children’s Art Week is a UK-wide celebration of art-making with and by children and young people. Organised each year by Engage\, the National Association for Gallery Education\, the programme runs over several weeks in June and July. In 2026 the programme runs from Saturday 27 June to Sunday 12 July\, with thousands of activities at galleries\, museums\, schools\, libraries\, and community venues. \nWhat is Children’s Art Week?\nChildren’s Art Week is a national arts education programme that brings children\, families\, and educators together with artists and venues for hundreds of free or low-cost creative activities. It is run by Engage\, the UK’s leading membership body for gallery\, art\, and museum educators\, and supported by Arts Council England. The programme typically lasts three weeks rather than a single week\, giving venues across the country flexibility to schedule events. \nWhen is Children’s Art Week?\nChildren’s Art Week runs each summer over multiple weeks. In 2026 it takes place from Saturday 27 June to Sunday 12 July\, with venues running activities at points across that fortnight. Each year the programme has a theme; recent themes have included Storytelling\, Power\, and Identity. The official hashtag is #ChildrensArtWeek. \nWhy Children’s Art Week Matters\nAccess to high-quality art\, design\, and creative learning has narrowed in many UK schools over the past decade. Department for Education figures show that GCSE entries in arts subjects fell by around 40 per cent between 2010 and 2023\, and many state schools have reduced their dedicated art teaching hours. At the same time\, research from the Cultural Learning Alliance and Engage shows that children involved in the arts have better wellbeing outcomes\, higher confidence\, and stronger creative thinking skills. Children’s Art Week exists to make creative experiences visible and accessible to every child\, regardless of family income or postcode. \nHow to Get Involved in Children’s Art Week\nThe programme is designed for schools\, families\, artists\, and venues at every scale: \n\nSearch the Engage events map – Visit engage.org to find activities near you\, from gallery workshops to outdoor art trails.\nSign your school up to host an activity – Engage offers free toolkits\, planning advice\, and a listing on the official map for participating schools.\nBook a family workshop – Major venues such as the Tate\, V&A\, Whitworth\, National Galleries Scotland\, and London Transport Museum run free Children’s Art Week events.\nOrganise a community art day – Libraries\, churches\, community centres\, and parks can run drop-in activities such as printmaking\, collage\, or chalk drawing.\nVisit a museum or gallery – Many free national museums layer extra family-friendly activities during Children’s Art Week\, including artist-led sessions and craft tables.\nBuy art supplies for a local school – Schools rarely have surplus budget for materials; donating sketchbooks\, paints\, and clay can have a real impact.\nShare your child’s artwork online – Use #ChildrensArtWeek to celebrate the work of young artists and inspire others to take part.\n\nHistory of Children’s Art Week\nEngage was founded in 1989 as the Visual Arts and Galleries Association (VAGA)\, evolving over the next two decades into Engage\, the National Association for Gallery Education. The organisation supports more than 1\,000 members across the UK and internationally\, advocating for high-quality engagement with the visual arts in formal and informal learning settings. Children’s Art Week was developed by Engage as a flagship public programme\, giving its members a coordinated platform to invite families into galleries\, museums\, and schools. \nThe programme has grown from a small London-based initiative into a UK-wide festival involving thousands of venues. Recent editions have run over three weeks rather than a single week\, recognising the practical reality that schools\, museums\, and families need time and flexibility. The programme is now supported by major partners including Arts Council England and the Foyle Foundation\, alongside private donors and individual venue contributions. \nNoteworthy Facts About Children’s Art Week\n\nChildren’s Art Week is organised by Engage\, the National Association for Gallery Education.\nEngage was founded in 1989 and supports more than 1\,000 members across the UK and beyond.\nThe programme typically runs over three weeks rather than a single week.\nHundreds of UK venues take part each year\, from local libraries to national museums.\nGCSE entries in arts subjects fell by around 40 per cent in England between 2010 and 2023 (DfE).\n\nFrequently Asked Questions\nWhat is Children’s Art Week?\nAn annual UK programme celebrating creative learning and the work of children and young people\, run by Engage\, the National Association for Gallery Education. \nWhen is Children’s Art Week in 2026?\nFrom Saturday 27 June to Sunday 12 July 2026. \nWho organises Children’s Art Week?\nEngage\, the UK’s national membership body for gallery\, art\, and museum educators\, with support from Arts Council England. \nSpread the Word\nHelp raise awareness by sharing Children’s Art Week with your friends\, family\, and followers. Use the hashtag #ChildrensArtWeek on social media. The more people who celebrate young artists\, the stronger the case for protecting arts education. \nRelated Awareness Days\n\nChildren’s Book Week – A complementary celebration of reading and storytelling for young people.\nTeacher Appreciation Week – Recognises the educators who deliver creative learning every day.\nInternational Youth Day – The global UN day that places young people at the centre of social and creative life.\n\nLinks\n\nVisit Engage’s Children’s Art Week archive\nExplore more awareness days at AwarenessDays.com
URL:https://www.awarenessdays.com/awareness-days-calendar/childrens-art-week/
LOCATION:United Kingdom\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:Education & Youth Awareness,June Awareness Days,United Kingdom
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.awarenessdays.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/istock-1448630399.jpg
GEO:55.378051;-3.435973
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260629
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20260706
DTSTAMP:20260520T205834
CREATED:20260505T140113Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260505T140113Z
UID:10021657-1782691200-1783295999@www.awarenessdays.com
SUMMARY:Love Your Lungs Week
DESCRIPTION:Love Your Lungs Week 2026 takes place from Monday 29 June to Sunday 5 July 2026. The annual campaign is led by Asthma + Lung UK and dedicated to raising awareness of lung conditions\, encouraging people to look after their respiratory health\, and raising funds for research\, advice\, and support for the millions of people in the UK who live with conditions such as asthma\, COPD\, and lung cancer. \nWhat is Love Your Lungs Week?\nLove Your Lungs Week is the flagship public awareness week of Asthma + Lung UK\, the UK charity formed by the merger of the British Lung Foundation and Asthma UK. The week brings together patients\, families\, employers\, healthcare professionals\, and supporters to highlight the importance of healthy lungs\, share practical advice\, and fundraise for the charity’s work. The 2026 campaign focuses on workplaces and includes a programme of fundraising challenges for in-person\, hybrid\, and remote teams. \nWhen is Love Your Lungs Week?\nLove Your Lungs Week 2026 runs from Monday 29 June to Sunday 5 July 2026. The week is held in late June and early July each year. Dates are confirmed annually by Asthma + Lung UK\, with public-facing materials and corporate fundraising packs released in the spring. \nWhy Love Your Lungs Week Matters\nLung conditions are the third biggest cause of death in the UK after heart disease and cancer. Asthma + Lung UK estimates that 1 in 5 people in the UK will develop a lung condition during their lifetime. Asthma alone affects 5.4 million people\, while around 1.2 million live with diagnosed chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD)\, with many more undiagnosed. Despite this scale\, lung health receives a small fraction of the research investment given to comparable diseases\, and air pollution continues to make matters worse\, particularly for children. Love Your Lungs Week is a chance to draw attention to all of this and to fund the work that improves outcomes. \nHow to Get Involved in Love Your Lungs Week\nAsthma + Lung UK provides free resources\, social media graphics\, and fundraising packs. Try one or several of the following: \n\nSign up your workplace – Register with Asthma + Lung UK as a corporate supporter and access ready-to-go fundraising activities for in-office\, hybrid\, and remote teams.\nTake a daily walk challenge – Many participants take part in a step or distance challenge across the week\, with sponsors donating per kilometre or per day completed.\nQuit smoking or vaping – The single biggest step you can take for your lungs is to stop smoking. Use the week as a deadline and access free NHS quit support.\nTest your lung age – Asthma + Lung UK and many pharmacies offer simple peak flow or spirometry tests that estimate lung age. Knowing where you stand is a strong motivator.\nImprove your home air quality – Ventilate rooms regularly\, avoid burning candles or incense in confined spaces\, and consider an air purifier if you live in a high-pollution area.\nTalk to your doctor about a cough – A cough lasting more than three weeks is a red-flag symptom that warrants assessment. Use the week as a prompt to make the appointment you have been delaying.\nDonate or fundraise – Direct donations to Asthma + Lung UK fund the helpline\, research grants\, and patient advocacy. The charity’s website includes a JustGiving template to make fundraising easy.\nCampaign for cleaner air – Air pollution is a major driver of lung disease. Support clean air zones\, school streets\, and local active travel schemes that reduce pollution at source.\n\nHistory of Love Your Lungs Week\nLove Your Lungs Week was launched by the British Lung Foundation in 2014 to bring more public attention to respiratory disease\, which had long been under-represented in mainstream health awareness campaigns. The first campaign focused on the basic statistics of lung disease in the UK and encouraged people to take a free online breath test. \nIn 2020 the British Lung Foundation merged with Asthma UK to create Asthma + Lung UK\, the UK’s leading charity for the country’s millions of people with lung conditions. The merged charity continued the campaign under the same name\, building it into a high-profile annual fixture with corporate partners\, hospital trust supporters\, and celebrity ambassadors. \nRecent campaigns have widened the focus beyond individual lung conditions to include the wider determinants of lung health\, particularly air pollution and the effects of childhood exposure to dirty air. The week sits alongside other key dates in the lung health calendar\, including World Asthma Day in May\, World COPD Day in November\, and World Lung Cancer Day in August. \nNoteworthy Facts About Love Your Lungs Week\n\nLove Your Lungs Week was launched in 2014 by the British Lung Foundation\, which became Asthma + Lung UK after merging with Asthma UK in 2020.\nAround 12 million people in the UK have been diagnosed with a lung condition during their lifetime\, according to Asthma + Lung UK.\nAsthma affects approximately 5.4 million people in the UK\, including more than 1.1 million children.\nLung disease is the third biggest cause of death in the UK after heart disease and cancer.\nAir pollution is linked to 36\,000 deaths a year in the UK and is a major contributor to lung disease at all ages.\n\nFrequently Asked Questions\nWhat is Love Your Lungs Week?\nLove Your Lungs Week is the annual UK awareness and fundraising week run by Asthma + Lung UK\, focused on lung health and respiratory conditions including asthma\, COPD\, and lung cancer. \nWhen is Love Your Lungs Week in 2026?\nLove Your Lungs Week 2026 runs from Monday 29 June to Sunday 5 July 2026. \nWho organises Love Your Lungs Week?\nThe week is organised by Asthma + Lung UK\, the charity formed in 2020 from the merger of the British Lung Foundation and Asthma UK. \nSpread the Word\nHelp raise awareness by sharing Love Your Lungs Week with your friends\, family\, and followers. Use the hashtags #LoveYourLungsWeek and #LoveYourLungs2026 on social media. The more conversations we have about lung health\, the more lives are improved. \nRelated Awareness Days\n\nWorld COPD Awareness Day – The global day in November dedicated to chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.\nWorld Wellbeing Week – The wider wellbeing week running in late June\, encompassing physical and mental health.\nSun Awareness Week – Another major UK summer health awareness week run by the British Association of Dermatologists.\n\nLinks\n\nVisit the official Love Your Lungs Week page\nExplore more awareness days at AwarenessDays.com
URL:https://www.awarenessdays.com/awareness-days-calendar/love-your-lungs-week/
LOCATION:United Kingdom\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:Health & Wellbeing Awareness,June Awareness Days,United Kingdom
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.awarenessdays.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/istock-1730908694.jpg
GEO:55.378051;-3.435973
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260630
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20260701
DTSTAMP:20260520T205834
CREATED:20260505T140846Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260505T150413Z
UID:10021682-1782777600-1782863999@www.awarenessdays.com
SUMMARY:Social Media Day
DESCRIPTION:Social Media Day\, sometimes called World Social Media Day\, takes place on 30 June each year. Launched by the technology news site Mashable in 2010\, it celebrates the global impact of social media on how we communicate\, share news\, build communities\, and run businesses. \nWhat is Social Media Day?\nSocial Media Day is an annual celebration of the platforms that have reshaped global communication over the past two decades. The day recognises the role of social media in connecting people across distance\, supporting movements and causes\, helping small businesses reach audiences\, and giving creators new ways to make a living. It also invites reflection on the harms of social media\, from misinformation and online abuse to mental health pressures\, particularly for younger users. Social Media Day is supported by digital marketing agencies\, media organisations\, and creators around the world. \nWhen is Social Media Day?\nSocial Media Day takes place on Tuesday\, 30 June 2026. The date is fixed each year. It is celebrated globally\, with particular activity in the United States\, United Kingdom\, India\, Brazil\, the Philippines\, and across Europe\, all major markets for social platforms. \nWhy Social Media Day Matters\nAccording to DataReportal’s Digital 2024 reports\, around 5.3 billion people worldwide use social media\, equivalent to roughly two-thirds of the global population. The average user spends close to 2.5 hours a day on social platforms\, and small businesses report social media as a leading channel for reaching new customers. The technology has transformed politics\, journalism\, and culture in ways that would have been unimaginable when the day was first launched. Social Media Day matters because it gives professionals\, creators\, and ordinary users a moment to celebrate what social media has made possible while encouraging better\, healthier\, and more honest use of the platforms. \nHow to Get Involved in Social Media Day\nThe day is naturally suited to social media itself\, but it also invites real-world reflection. \n\nThank a creator – Send a message or comment to a creator whose work you have valued. Behind every great account is a real person who appreciates kind words.\nReconnect with someone offline – Use the day as a prompt to pick up the phone\, write a real letter\, or arrange to meet up with someone you usually only see in your feed.\nAudit your feed – Unfollow accounts that drain your energy and follow new ones that inspire\, inform\, or make you laugh.\nTry a new platform – Spend an hour exploring a platform you don’t usually use\, whether that is BlueSky\, Mastodon\, Threads\, TikTok\, or LinkedIn.\nShare your own story – Tell your community something you have learned\, struggled with\, or are proud of\, beyond your usual content.\nPromote a small business or charity – Use your platform\, however small\, to amplify someone whose work deserves more attention.\nTake a partial break – Use the day to test a new boundary\, such as no social media after 9pm\, or one screen-free hour over breakfast.\nTalk to young people – Use the day to start a conversation with children\, teenagers\, or grandparents about what they enjoy and find difficult about social media.\n\nHistory of Social Media Day\nSocial Media Day was launched by Mashable on 30 June 2010\, when social media was already growing rapidly but still on a smaller scale than today. Twitter was four years old\, Facebook was six years old\, and Instagram was about to launch later that year. Mashable founder Pete Cashmore explained that the day was meant to acknowledge how thoroughly social platforms had begun to reshape personal\, professional\, and political life. \nThe first Social Media Day was marked with global meet-ups in cities including New York\, London\, Mumbai\, and Sydney\, where local communities gathered to celebrate the people behind the accounts. In the years since\, the day has become widely observed by digital marketers\, agencies\, journalists\, and brands\, as well as by everyday users sharing memories\, milestones\, and reflections. \nThe day’s tone has shifted over the years as social media itself has matured. Early Social Media Days were almost uniformly celebratory. More recent observances have included space for honest discussion of misinformation\, online abuse\, mental health pressures\, and the future of platforms. Despite these challenges\, Social Media Day remains a chance to mark how this technology has changed everyday life\, business\, and culture. \nNoteworthy Facts About Social Media Day\n\nSocial Media Day was launched by Mashable on 30 June 2010 to mark the cultural impact of social platforms.\nAccording to DataReportal\, around 5.3 billion people worldwide were using social media in 2024.\nThe average global social media user has accounts on more than six platforms\, although they actively use only a few.\nYouTube\, Facebook\, WhatsApp\, Instagram\, and TikTok are consistently among the most-used platforms by global monthly active users.\nSocial media has become the leading channel for news and current affairs for many people under 35\, according to Reuters Institute Digital News Reports.\n\nFrequently Asked Questions\nWhat is Social Media Day?\nIt is an annual global celebration of social media and its impact on communication\, business\, and culture\, marked every 30 June. \nWhen is Social Media Day in 2026?\nIt falls on Tuesday\, 30 June 2026. \nWho started Social Media Day?\nThe day was launched by the technology news site Mashable on 30 June 2010\, founded by Pete Cashmore\, with worldwide meet-ups in cities such as New York\, London\, and Mumbai. \nSpread the Word\nJoin the celebration and share your favourite social media memories on social media (naturally) with #SocialMediaDay and #SocialMediaDay2026. Tag the creators\, friends\, and small businesses that make your feed worth scrolling. \nRelated Awareness Days\n\nWorld Mental Health Day – Connects to the mental health side of social media use\, particularly for younger people.\nWorld Day for Cultural Diversity for Dialogue and Development – Reflects social media’s role in connecting and sometimes dividing diverse communities.\nChildren’s Book Week – A reminder that off-screen reading remains as important as ever in the social media era.\n\nLinks\n\nRead more from Mashable\, the founder of Social Media Day\nExplore more awareness days at AwarenessDays.com
URL:https://www.awarenessdays.com/awareness-days-calendar/world-social-media-day/
LOCATION:International
CATEGORIES:Arts, Culture & Heritage,International,June Awareness Days
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.awarenessdays.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/11/iStock-1169192820-1-1-1.jpg
GEO:37.09024;-95.712891
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260701
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20260702
DTSTAMP:20260520T205834
CREATED:20241124T225820Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260310T001709Z
UID:10019745-1782864000-1782864000@www.awarenessdays.com
SUMMARY:Canada Day 2026
DESCRIPTION:Every year on July 1st\, communities across Canada come alive with celebration\, reflection\, and national pride. Canada Day marks the anniversary of the formation of the country we know today – and in 2026\, it offers another powerful moment to honour the past\, celebrate the present\, and imagine a better future. Whether it’s fireworks in Vancouver\, concerts in Ottawa\, or quiet moments of gratitude at home\, Canada Day invites people of all backgrounds to connect with the meaning of being Canadian. \nWhat is Canada Day?\nCanada Day commemorates the confederation of Canada\, when the British North America Act (now called the Constitution Act) came into effect on July 1\, 1867. It united the provinces of Ontario\, Quebec\, New Brunswick\, and Nova Scotia into one country under a federal government. Over time\, Canada grew to include all ten provinces and three territories\, developing its own identity distinct from its colonial roots. \nWhile the day is often associated with red-and-white flags\, barbecues\, and public festivities\, it’s also a time for reflection – especially for Indigenous communities whose histories predate Confederation by thousands of years. Many people now use Canada Day to learn\, listen\, and commit to reconciliation and justice alongside celebration. \nWhen is Canada Day 2026?\nCanada Day 2026 takes place on Tuesday\, July 1. As a statutory holiday nationwide\, most workplaces\, schools\, and government offices will be closed. Cities and towns across the country will host free public events ranging from parades and concerts to citizenship ceremonies and historical exhibits. In many places\, the day ends with fireworks displays and communal gatherings in parks or on waterfronts. \nWhy Canada Day Matters\nCanada Day is more than just a birthday. It’s a chance to examine the values Canada stands for – inclusion\, diversity\, democracy\, and peace – and to consider how well we live up to those ideals. It’s a time to recognise the achievements and contributions of people across the country\, from First Nations\, Inuit and Métis communities to immigrants and refugees building new lives. \nIt also offers a space to acknowledge painful truths: the legacy of residential schools\, broken treaties\, and ongoing systemic injustices. Many Canadians now mark the day with both pride and reflection\, recognising that national identity includes joy and responsibility in equal measure. \nHow to Get Involved in Canada Day 2026\nWhether you’re attending a public celebration or staying closer to home\, there are many ways to engage: \n\nJoin a Local Event: Look for parades\, live music\, art exhibits\, and fireworks in your community.\nSupport Indigenous Voices: Attend Indigenous-led events\, learn about local Nations\, or support Indigenous artists and organisations.\nHost a Gathering: Invite friends and neighbours for a meal\, conversation\, or shared activity that reflects Canadian values.\nLearn and Reflect: Read a book by a Canadian author\, explore history resources\, or listen to stories from people of diverse backgrounds.\nVolunteer: Help out at a Canada Day event or community centre\, or find a local initiative that aligns with your values.\n\nHistory of Canada Day\nThe holiday was originally called Dominion Day\, marking the creation of the Dominion of Canada on July 1\, 1867. Over the years\, it evolved into a broader national celebration\, and in 1982 – the same year the Constitution was patriated from the UK – the holiday was officially renamed Canada Day. The change reflected Canada’s growing independence and multicultural identity. \nToday\, the day continues to evolve. In recent years\, more Canadians have used it to reckon with the country’s colonial legacy\, particularly in light of the findings of unmarked graves at former residential schools. As a result\, Canada Day has become a more nuanced\, inclusive observance that encourages celebration\, education\, and action. \nNoteworthy Facts About Canada Day\n\nThe first official Dominion Day celebrations were held in 1868\, just one year after Confederation.\nCanada Day became a statutory holiday in 1879 but wasn’t widely celebrated until the late 20th century.\nMore than 85% of Canadians now participate in some form of Canada Day activity.\nThe national Canada Day event in Ottawa typically includes performances by top Canadian artists and a flyover by the Royal Canadian Air Force Snowbirds.\nJuly 1 is also Moving Day in Quebec\, when many residential leases expire and people relocate – creating a unique local twist on the holiday.\n\nHashtags\n#CanadaDay\, #CanadaDay2026\, #ProudToBeCanadian\, #ReflectAndCelebrate \nLinks\n\nGovernment of Canada – Canada Day\nLearn about Indigenous Peoples in Canada\nCanadian Museum of History
URL:https://www.awarenessdays.com/awareness-days-calendar/canada-day/
LOCATION:International
CATEGORIES:Education & Youth Awareness,International,July Awareness Days
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.awarenessdays.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/11/iStock-477832442-1-1.jpg
GEO:37.09024;-95.712891
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260701
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20260702
DTSTAMP:20260520T205834
CREATED:20241124T230302Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260310T001310Z
UID:10019557-1782864000-1782864000@www.awarenessdays.com
SUMMARY:International Reggae Day 2026
DESCRIPTION:International Reggae Day is a global celebration dedicated to the vibrant rhythms\, powerful messages\, and cultural influence of reggae music. This event unites fans\, artists\, and communities around the world\, highlighting reggae’s enduring impact on music\, culture\, and social change. \nWhat is International Reggae Day?\nInternational Reggae Day is an annual event that honours reggae music\, its creators\, and its global legacy. Originating in Jamaica\, the celebration pays tribute to the genre’s roots in Caribbean culture and its significant role in promoting messages of unity\, love\, and social justice. The day features musical performances\, discussions\, and activities that showcase reggae’s influence on art\, fashion\, and activism worldwide. \nWhen is International Reggae Day?\nInternational Reggae Day takes place every year on July 1st. In 2026\, it will be celebrated on Tuesday\, July 1st. Fans and communities across the globe join together on this date to appreciate reggae music and culture in various creative and meaningful ways. \nWhy is International Reggae Day Important?\nReggae music has long served as a voice for the oppressed and a call for positive change. International Reggae Day not only celebrates the genre’s musical brilliance but also its role in advocating for peace\, equality\, and cultural pride. The day provides an opportunity to educate new generations about reggae’s origins and its significance as a tool for empowerment and unity. \nHow to Get Involved\nThere are many ways to participate in International Reggae Day in 2026: \n\nListen and Share: Play your favourite reggae tracks and share them with friends and family.\nAttend Events: Look for local or virtual reggae concerts\, workshops\, and cultural showcases.\nSupport Artists: Explore music from both legendary and emerging reggae artists.\nLearn and Educate: Discover reggae’s history and its cultural impact\, and share your knowledge with others.\nExpress Yourself: Embrace reggae-inspired fashion\, art\, or cuisine to celebrate the spirit of the day.\n\nHistory of International Reggae Day\nInternational Reggae Day was first celebrated in 1994\, initiated by Andrea Davis in Kingston\, Jamaica. Inspired by a BBC radio feature on reggae’s global reach\, Davis envisioned a day that would connect reggae lovers beyond borders. Since then\, the event has grown into a worldwide phenomenon\, with celebrations taking place in cities across every continent. \nFacts About International Reggae Day\n\nReggae music was officially recognised by UNESCO as an Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity in 2018.\nThe day is celebrated not just in Jamaica but in major cities such as London\, New York\, and Tokyo.\nInternational Reggae Day often features special broadcasts\, interviews\, and playlists curated by leading reggae artists and DJs.\n\nRelevant Hashtags\n#InternationalReggaeDay #ReggaeDay2026 #ReggaeMusic #ReggaeCulture #UnityThroughMusic #Jamaica #GlobalReggae
URL:https://www.awarenessdays.com/awareness-days-calendar/international-reggae-day/
LOCATION:International
CATEGORIES:Arts, Culture & Heritage
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.awarenessdays.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/07/iStock-517901771-scaled.jpg
GEO:37.09024;-95.712891
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260701
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20260702
DTSTAMP:20260520T205834
CREATED:20250622T153107Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260309T235614Z
UID:10019877-1782864000-1782864000@www.awarenessdays.com
SUMMARY:Love All Budgies Day 2026
DESCRIPTION:Welcome bird enthusiasts! We are thrilled to announce that Love All Budgies Day 2026 is fast approaching. This day is all about celebrating the beauty and charm of budgies and spreading awareness about their needs and care. So\, let’s flutter into the details! \nWhen is Love All Budgies Day 2026?\nLove All Budgies Day 2026 is celebrated on July 1st. This day is designated each year to commemorate these delightful creatures and raise awareness about their wellbeing. \nWhat is Love All Budgies Day 2026?\nLove All Budgies Day 2026 is a day dedicated to appreciating budgies\, also known as parakeets. This event encourages budgie owners and bird lovers worldwide to celebrate their feathered friends\, learn more about their care\, and promote budgie adoption and rescue efforts. \nHow to Get Involved\n\nAdopt a budgie from a local shelter or rescue group.\nLearn more about budgie care and share your knowledge with others.\nDonate to organizations that support budgie rescue and care.\nHost or participate in local budgie-oriented events.\nPost about your budgie or budgie love on social media using the event’s official hashtags.\n\nHistory of Love All Budgies Day\nLove All Budgies Day started in 2011 by a group of budgie enthusiasts and animal welfare advocates. They saw the need to highlight budgies’ unique qualities and raise awareness about their proper care and the importance of adoption. Since then\, it has been celebrated annually\, growing in popularity each year. \nFun or Interesting Facts About Love All Budgies Day 2026\nDid you know that Love All Budgies Day 2026 will mark the 14th annual celebration? This event has reached bird lovers in over 30 countries worldwide\, and the number of budgie adoptions has significantly increased since its inception. \nRelevant Hashtags\nSpread the word about Love All Budgies Day 2026 by using the following hashtags on your social media platforms: #LoveAllBudgiesDay2026\, #BudgieLove\, #AdoptABudgie.
URL:https://www.awarenessdays.com/awareness-days-calendar/love-all-budgies-day/
LOCATION:International
CATEGORIES:Animals & Wildlife Awareness,August Awareness Days,Australia,International,United Kingdom,United States
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.awarenessdays.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/06/iStock-2169204403-1-scaled.jpg
GEO:37.09024;-95.712891
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260701
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20260702
DTSTAMP:20260520T205834
CREATED:20260312T082653Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260312T082657Z
UID:10019882-1782864000-1782950399@www.awarenessdays.com
SUMMARY:International Joke Day 2026
DESCRIPTION:Get ready to tickle your funny bone\, because International Joke Day 2026 is just around the corner! Join us as we celebrate a day devoted to laughter and joy\, spreading cheer with the universal language of humor. \nWhen is International Joke Day 2026?\nInternational Joke Day 2026 is set to take place on Wednesday\, July 1\, 2026. \nWhat is International Joke Day 2026?\nInternational Joke Day is an annual event that celebrates the art of joke-telling and humor. This special day encourages people to share their best jokes\, laugh heartily\, and spread joy everywhere they go. \nHow to Get Involved\n\nShare your favorite jokes with friends\, family\, and colleagues.\nParticipate in joke-telling competitions or comedy shows.\nPost your favorite jokes on social media with the official event hashtags.\nDonate to charities that use humor therapy to bring joy to those in need.\nRead a joke book or watch a comedy to enjoy the day.\n\nHistory of International Joke Day\nInternational Joke Day was first celebrated in the United States in 1994. The idea was proposed by comedian Wayne Reinagel as a day for people to share their favorite jokes and spread happiness. The event has since gained worldwide recognition\, with people from different countries participating every year. \nFun or Interesting Facts About International Joke Day 2026\nDid you know that laughter has numerous health benefits? It releases endorphins\, improves mood\, reduces stress\, and even boosts immunity. On International Joke Day\, we’re not just sharing jokes\, we’re sharing health and happiness! \nRelevant Hashtags\nUse these hashtags to join the conversation and share your favorite jokes: #InternationalJokeDay2026\, #JokeDay\, #SpreadLaughter\, #JustForLaughs
URL:https://www.awarenessdays.com/awareness-days-calendar/international-joke-day/
LOCATION:International
CATEGORIES:Fun & Quirky Awareness Days,International
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.awarenessdays.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/06/iStock-2177819443-1.jpg
GEO:37.09024;-95.712891
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR